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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Now Open Downtown: The Vault and Lisa’s Lunchbox

Say you want to grab a nice meal and glass of wine, and your boyfriend wants to watch the game. Or you’re looking for some good music. Or you want to bring the kids along.

Business partners Michael O’Mell, Tyson Bridge, and John Kalb have spent the last four months putting all the right bells in all the right places and all the right whistles in the other right places so that you may do any or all of these things.

The three men purchased the property at 124 GE Patterson, formerly the site of the Double J Smokehouse, back in November and debuted the redesigned spot as The Vault mid-March.

Aaron Winters is now at The Vault.

“We were looking to do something, and we love the South Main area. You can tell it’s growing, and they’ll have the new movie theater and hotel coming in,” O’Mell says. “This space became available, and it was the right opportunity at the right time.”

After acquiring the space, which was originally a bank in the ’50s, complete with a still-standing vault, they stripped everything down to its bare bones, even taking out some columns and resupporting the building. They completely redid the kitchen, extended the bar six feet, repainted, and amped up the stage with new lights and new sound.

They installed TVs with their own remotes at every custom-made booth, made available an app to listen to the television on personal devices, installed charging stations along the bar, and offer the only Frost Rail in Memphis — a three-inch trough full of snow-like frost for to keep your beer cold.

And yes, they still have that killer upstairs patio in the back.

But their real secret weapon is the man behind their made-to-order pork rinds, their Cornish Game Hen, their Bacon Wrapped Chicken Roulade, and their Steak and Pommes Frites.

That would be Aaron Winters, of Porcellino’s and Miss Cordelia’s fame.

“I tried to come up with an eclectic menu with roots in Southern cuisine,” Winters, who was classically trained as a butcher in Italy, says.

He brings in produce from Wilson Farms, beef from Claybrook Farms, and catfish from Lakes Catfish.

“We’re so close to the farmers market, they’ll swing by here when they’re done, and I shop off the back of their trucks,” Winters says.

In addition to the entrees mentioned above, he offers a flat breads menu, sandwiches, starters including a daily selection of charcuterie, and an oyster menu.

“We’re getting in some really good oysters from around the country,” Winters says.

Plans include hosting crawfish boils during season and pig roasts in the fall, as well as Memphis’ favorite meal — brunch.

“Brunch is forthcoming,” O’Mell says. “We want to make sure we do a few things really well, then add more.”

Look for the building with a silver vault door on the front.

The Vault, 124 GE Patterson, 591-8000, vaultmemphis.com. Open 11 a.m. daily for lunch; dinner 5 to 10 p.m.; late-night menu 10 p.m. to close.

What’s that quote about “The day I got sacked was the best thing that ever happened to me”?

Whatever it is, it rings true for Lisa Clay Getske.

After working for Houston’s for 14 years, she went on to manage a chain restaurant that, after two years, ended up letting her go “for a less expensive, younger model.”

Clay Getske took it upon herself to leverage her experience and do her own thing.

That thing has grown into the empire that is Lisa’s Lunchbox.

And in mid-March, the empire spread to the downtown area into the former Tuscany Italian Eatery at 116 S. Front.

“It’s fantastic,” she says. “AutoZone is a big customer that’s right across the street, and it’s been fun being down here during all the festivals.”

The move had everything to do with a ServiceMaster devotee, her managing business partner, and a little luck.

“At my original location at the Ridgeway Business Center, ServiceMaster is across the street,” Clay Getske says. “My friend works at the ServiceMaster downtown, and he kept saying, ‘Hey, there’s this spot downtown.'”

That spot was Front Street Deli, which didn’t work out for Clay Getske, but thanks to her business partner, Matt Reisinger’s, thirst for water, they found the space at 116 S. Front.

“We had the keys to the Front Street Deli, but we hadn’t signed the lease,” Clay Getske says. “They were feeling a little nostalgic, and didn’t want to change the name. When Matt was down there, he went into Tuscany for a bottle of water and got to talking to [owner] Jeremy Martin, and he said, ‘Why don’t you buy this place?'”

Lisa’s Lunchbox specializes in “really good, fresh, real food,” such as her Chicken Club Panini, her “massive” BLT “with real bacon, and we’re not stingy with it,” and her spicy pimento and cheese. She also offers frozen meals to go, which will be included in the new location in May, and breakfast sandwiches and smoothies.

“We go before the beer board this week, and I think that’s something I want to offer downtown for the tourists who are walking around and want something to eat and a beer,” she says.

She also plans on staying open later eventually.

Lisa’s Lunchbox, 116 S. Front, 729-7277, lisaslunchbox.com. Open 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Mon.-Fri.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Lisa’s Lunchbox to Go in Tuscany Space, etc.

John Klyce Minervini

Lisa Clay Getske

Lisa’s Lunchbox will move into the Tuscany Italian Eatery space on Front street. Owner Lisa Clay Getske says they were seriously pursuing the Front Street Deli spot, but things didn’t work out.

“Everything happens for a reason,” says Getske, noting that the Tuscany space seems like a better fit. The Front Street Deli is so small that Getske was concerned that much of the food would have to be made off-site. The Tuscany space will accommodate the full Lunchbox menu, including panini and cold sandwiches and smoothies. They plan to offer frozen dinners for take-away as well.

They are shooting for a March 1st opening to coincide with the 10th birthday of the original Lisa’s Lunchbox in East Memphis.

Old Dominick Distillery began filling whiskey barrels last week.

From the press release:

Old Dominick Distillery is pleased to announce that it started filling whiskey barrels with its carefully crafted Memphis TN Whiskey.

Old Dominick Whiskey was a known label from 1866 until prohibition. The D. Canale family has now restored this 150 year-old family business into a full service grain-to-glass spirits distillery.

In the last few days, Alex Castle, head distiller and her team distilled whiskey made from their own mash, from grains milled, cooked, malted and fermented all in house. They put it through the mandatory TN whiskey maple charcoal filter and it was time to start filling the whiskey oak barrels.
It felt like a historical moment for the Canale family and the Old Dominick team.

“It is an exciting day for our company, and fitting that we are aging Old Dominick Whiskies for the first time since Tennessee Prohibition forced us to stop precisely 100 years ago in 1917.” Said Chris Canale, Old Dominick Distillery owner and great-great grandson of Domenico Canale, founder of the Old Dominick Brand.

Beyond bringing true craft production to Downtown, Old Dominick Distillery will welcome guests for tours, tastings, events, and retail spirits sales. Old Dominick opens this year, in the spring.

Old Dominick is shooting for a spring opening. According to a rep, vodkas and a bourbon base heritage drink will be released when they open their doors and will be available at liquor stores and bars. The whiskey will take three or four years to age.

Burgerim, the Israeli franchise, is now open on Highland Strip. They offer mini burgers in duos, trios, or party boxes. Options include wagyu beef, lamb, turkey, veggie, and chicken.

• I tagged along to this tasting at City Silo Table & Pantry.

Highlights include the Foxy BBQ, a dish inspired by Flyer friends The Chubby Vegetarian. This is a BBQ sandwich made with spaghetti squash. The barbecue sauce, made for City Silo by the Rendezvous, is a perfect accent — not too sweet with just the right kick of spice. Great bun, too.

More thumbs ups: Buffalo Tempeh + Sesame Cauliflower Wrap, the cauliflower wings, and the Matcha, Matcha, Matcha Wellness Latte.

For those vegans and vegetarians who are bummed that City Silo has veered from its Cosmic Coconut roots and is serving eggs and chicken, take heart: The menu at City Silo is, by far, mostly vegan, more extensive than Cosmic Coconut’s, and is thoughtful and inventive.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Blind Bear Brings Back Lunch Service; a Second Location for Lisa’s Lunchbox.

Seven years ago, Lisa Clay Getske founded Lisa’s Lunchbox, a sandwich joint, inside an office tower near Poplar and I-240. You can’t see it from the street, and in anybody else’s hands, it would have gone out of business in six months.

But not Lisa’s Lunchbox. There’s a line out the door every day, and Getske has just opened a second location on Poplar, next to Casablanca. What’s her secret?

“Well,” reflects Getske, “I guess for starters, we only use real food. I remember, when I first opened, my food purveyor tried to sell me some pre-cooked chicken with grill marks on it. I was like, No thank you.”

It’s difficult to describe what makes Lisa’s Lunchbox work so well. Is it the menu, handwritten on colorful pieces of construction paper taped to the wall? Or is it the crunchy, oven-baked bacon, deployed in dishes like the chicken club wrap ($7.32) and the potato soup ($3.20)?

What’s easier to pin down is consistent quality — and freshness — of the fare. Just about everything, from the humble ranch dressing to the mighty chicken breast, is prepared onsite, every day.

The new Lisa’s Lunchbox was a smoothie bar before Getske leased the space. From the former tenants she inherited some very colorful walls — the color of mango sorbet — but also a unique opportunity: she got to buy their appliances.

That has led to a tasty innovation: They now offer a full line of smoothies and juices. Start off with a couple of ginger shots ($2.50). (In case you hadn’t heard, ginger is the new wheatgrass.) Faintly sweet and intensely spicy, it will heat you up and change your mood.

From there, graduate to a Memphis Mango smoothie ($4), a delicious slurry of mango, banana, cashews, vanilla, almond milk, and — if you ask for it — spinach and kale. Sweet but not too sweet, it’ll help you stay cool in the sticky weather.

“The last tenants,” remembers Getske, “put ice cream in all their smoothies. We’re trying to steer people toward real food and show them it can be just as delicious.”

John Klyce Minervini

The Gangster Philly

No one can appreciate comfort food quite like a server. The Blind Bear was founded in 2011 by three bartenders. So it makes sense that when, earlier this month, they started serving lunch again, they went for the kind of food they themselves would want to eat: comfort food classics like fried okra ($3) and barbecued bologna ($12).

“Downtown has a lot of expensive, nice food,” says co-founder Jeanette West. “But we also know that people work here. They want veggies, they want options, but they don’t want to spend their whole paycheck on a meal.”

For lunch, try the pepper jack mac & cheese ($3), which is faintly spicy, or the collard greens ($3), which are satisfyingly crisp. Chef Jeremy “JJ” Jaggers knows that many of his clientele don’t eat meat, so all sides are 100-percent vegetarian.

For me, it’s all about the Gangster Philly ($12). When developing the recipe, chef Jaggers went back to the source: Pat’s King of Steaks in Philadelphia, PA.

Jaggers starts with a rib-eye steak, which he slow-roasts to medium rare. Next, he slices the meat and finishes it on a flat-top griddle, before serving it with sauteed peppers and onions in a crusty Italian roll. But the sine qua non of this dish is the provolone béchamel sauce, a cheesy delight that will be waiting for me when I get to heaven.

“I’m a meat-eating chef,” confesses Jaggers. “So when I sit down for lunch, I want meat and cheese and bread. And I want the cheese to be nice and gooey and melty.”

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Baby Blues Salad at Lisa’s Lunch Box

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  • Justin Fox Burks

I have two friends who work in a building in the Ridgeway Loop, and all they ever talk about is Lisa’s Lunchbox and how great it is. I decided to “Like” Lisa’s on Facebook and started getting a daily update of their specials, which made me hungry and a little jealous. On a rare Friday off, I was finally able to give Lisa’s a try.