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Food & Drink We Saw You

WE SAW YOU: Farm Dinner By the Light of the Silvery Moon

If I had to create a perfect summer outdoor dinner, I don’t think I could do better than the one given by Elizabeth and Travis Harville over the July 4th weekend at Harville Farms in Byhalia, Mississippi.

I arrived before everyone had moved to the long tables set up crosswise on another part of the acreage. The scene was idyllic. Guests stood around in clusters and sat in chairs near the pond, dining on appetizers and drinking cocktails and beer. The weather, which had hinted at showers, was cooler than most July nights.

JP Archer, Rita Puryear, Allan Puryear, Amanda Cantrell, Allie and Joshua Smith at “Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Sam Haddow at “Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Michael Donahue)
“Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Michael Donahue)
“Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Michael Donahue)

Everyone then moved to the tables, which were decorated with blooms from a nearby patch of flowers and vegetables. More flowers were arranged on “Old Blue,” the tractor parked near the eating area.

Travis and Elizabeth Harville at “Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Michael Donahue)
“Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Michael Donahue)

Heck. There was even an almost full moon — (a “waxing full moon,” according to the National Weather Service. The full moon was July 3rd.)

Billed as “Farm Dinner Party,” the event was a celebration of the 40th birthdays of Elizabeth and Travis.

As the invitation read, “There’s nothing we would love more than to break bread and celebrate with you, our favorite folks. We hope you’ll join us for signature cocktails and a farm-inspired, chef curated dinner in the field at sunset.”

Who could resist that invitation?

The cuisine was provided by Memphis chefs Mac Edwards, Jordan and Lee Anna Beatty of Busy Bee Catering, and Will Marvel.

Mac Edwards, Jordan Beatty, Lee Anna Beatty, Will Marvel at “Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Michael Donahue)

So, how did all this come about in the first place?

“Travis and I love good food,” Elizabeth says. “We really love to go to restaurants and have an experience with really good food.”

And, she says, “It’s fun for me to have the experience where I don’t cook, but experience something I don’t normally cook.”

Elizabeth and Travis originally began growing garlic in Byhalia. “We began farming and selling our garden to P.O. Press (Public House & Provisions) when it was open with Jimmy Gentry,” she says, adding, “We fell in love with that chef-farmer type relationship.”

In  2019, they decided to move to their land in Byhalia. They wanted to grow more food as well as flowers for Elizabeth’s floral business, EH Blooms. Travis is owner of Coldspring Lawn & Landscape.

They began growing the basics, including tomatoes and cucumbers. They also began growing flowers — zinnias and dahlias.

“I had this dream to have dinner in the dahlias. Have dinners in this flower field.”

Then, she says, “It snowballed from a small dinner. We still wanted it to be intimate, but we wanted to include people in our lives that have been really significant and played an important part in who we are and where we are today.”

She and Maison McGhee, owner of Reverie Wedding Planning, began talking about doing a mock-up style shoot at the farm. “And it merged with the idea of us having a dinner.”

They invited 40 people. They wanted the experience to be “food from our farm, floral from our farm, and people we love out here.”

“Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Michael Donahue)

“Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Michael Donahue)
“Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Michael Donahue)

The Harvilles provided the garlic, squash, basil, beets, and carrots. “The blackberries for the dessert came from the farm. And I had harvested honeysuckle and made a honeysuckle simple syrup that Leanne used for the dessert.”

She harvested the honeysuckle in spring. “When they made their first blush I made (simple syrup) and froze it.”

Elizabeth let the team of chefs take care of the rest. “I knew Mac because of his restaurant ventures. I have eaten at some of his restaurants.”

Appetizers were cured and smoked Lake’s Catfish Inc. crostini with caper tartar sauce, summer pea hummus with Jerusalem Market & Restaurant pita triangles, and street tacos with roasted Jalapeño salsa. The dinner, served family style at the table, featured sliced beef with pickled vegetables and chimichurri, pork loin sliced with citrus gremolata, chicken negimaki, and roasted potato salad, summer pea salad, grilled garden vegetables, corn salad, and tomato and cucumber salad.

Jessica and Robert Akin at “Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Elizabeth and Travis Harville and the man who ate too many desserts at “Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Jessica Akin)
Elizabeth Harville at “Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Michael Donahue)

Dessert was peach and blackberry cobbler. I ate four of those. Which, apparently, was the talk of the kitchen. They told me they had leftovers.

Wyatt Haynes at “Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Michael Donahue)

In addition to Lake’s Catfish and Jerusalem Market & Restaurant, the beef and pork were Home Place Pastures, chicken thighs from Marmilu Farms, peas from Whitton Farms, tomatoes and more peas as well as potatoes from Yia’s Homegrown Produce; and the crostini from The Ginger’s Bread & Co.

Asked his overall impression about the evening, Edwards says “I just thought it was magical: the ingredients, the food, the setting, the people. I had never met Travis until that night. He was every bit as great as she is.”

They didn’t purposely pick the date for the dinner to coincide with that almost-full moon, Elizabeth says: “We were trying to pick a date when we thought the food would be ready, but it wouldn’t be the hottest part of the summer.”

But, she adds, “I kind of appreciate that detail.”

“Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Michael Donahue)
“Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Michael Donahue)
“Farm Dinner Party” (Credit: Michael Donahue)
We Saw You
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Food & Wine Food & Drink Food Reviews Hungry Memphis

Memphis Chefs Talk Mashed Potatoes

After hearing about Memphis being recognized as the mashed potato capital of America by Idahoan Foods, I wondered how Memphis chefs used mashed potatoes at their restaurants. So, I asked around.

Kelly English, owner of Iris, The Second Line, and Fino’s from the Hill, says, “I love crawfish boil mashed potatoes — with everything you would get in a crawfish boil. Just fold some crawfish tails, crispy sautéed andouille, corn kernels, and roasted garlic into your potatoes and season with your favorite Creole seasoning. Saute a piece of fish from the Gulf and pour brown butter and lemon juice over the whole dish.”

Derk Meitzler, chef/owner of The Vault, Paramount, Backlot Sandwich Shop, and Earnestine & Hazel’s, says, “I’ve used leftover mashed potatoes to make loaded tater tots. Put the potatoes, egg, flour, shredded cheddar cheese, bacon, and chives into a bowl and mix together. Form into the shape of a tater tot and roll in panko bread crumbs. Then fry them golden brown.”

Acre Restaurant executive chef
Andrew Adams
(Photo: Michael Donahue)

Elwood’s Shack owner Tim Bednarski shared his warm German potato salad recipe. Boil two pounds of new potatoes cut into fourths in salted water until tender. Render four pieces of bacon. Drain the potatoes while warm. Combine one cup sliced green onions, one-half cup diced celery, one-half cup mayonnaise, one-half cup sour cream, two tablespoons Dijon mustard, one-fourth cup apple cider vinegar, one-half cup chopped parsley, one-fourth cup pimentos, salt and pepper to taste, and “hot sauce for a kick.” Give it “a light mash.”

Veteran Memphis chef Mac Edwards, hospitality director for The Paramount, makes Very Anglo Latkes: “To leftover mashed potatoes, add grated onion, eggs, a little flour, and baking soda. Press into a patty, pan fry in one-fourth inch of oil until crispy and brown. Drain on a paper towel and sprinkle with salt while hot. I make a horseradish applesauce to go with it.”

Karen Carrier, owner of The Beauty Shop Restaurant, Mollie Fontaine Lounge, and Another Roadside Attraction, prepares Green Herb Roasted Garlic Creamed Potatoes, made with Yukon golds and a parsley, mint, and tarragon puree, unsalted butter, roasted garlic, creme fraiche, and grana padano, with salt and pepper to taste.

Saito 2 chef Jimmy “Sushi Jimi” Sinh makes a sushi roll with mashed potatoes. “Inside would be a deep-fried panko chicken,” he says. The roll is “topped with mashed potatoes and thinly sliced avocado.”

Ben Smith, chef/owner of Tsunami, says, “Mashed potatoes don’t play a major role in my restaurant, even though it’s one of the most requested side items. They normally only accompany our grilled filet of beef, but some customers get creative. We frequently have people order our pork and lemongrass meatballs on top of mashed potatoes.

“I’ve also known people to order mashed potatoes with a side of soy beurre blanc, which is kind of overkill because our mashed potatoes are already loaded with butter and cream.”

Acre Restaurant executive chef Andrew Adams says, “When I worked in a restaurant in New Jersey, I would make mashed potato sandwiches at the end of the night when leftovers were mashed potatoes and sourdough bread. I’ve been told that I break some sort of healthy eating rule by eating carbs on carbs. Lately, I’ve been doing the same with leftover cornbread.”

Peggy Brown, chef/owner of Peggy’s Healthy Home Cooking, cooks homestyle mashed potatoes: “We use Irish potatoes. Peel, wash, slice them up, put them in a pot with chicken broth, and boil until they get completely done. I also put salt in my pot while they’re cooking. Mash them with a potato masher and put in real butter and black pepper. Sometimes we put a little cream in them.”

If you still don’t have enough mashed potatoes in your life, try making some of these dishes.

Former Memphis chef Spencer McMillin, “traveling chef” and author of The Caritas Cookbook:  A Year in the Life with Recipes, knows his mashed potatoes. “I’ve been making smoked mashed potatoes since 1995,” says McMillin, now executive chef at Ciao Trattoria and Wine Bar in Durham, New Hampshire. “Wash Idaho russets, peel them, simmer — always starting in cold water — drain, smoke with any wood but mesquite, fortify with unholy amounts of hot cream and cold butter, season — kosher salt only, pepper and garlic fight with the smoke — and serve them napalm hot. If the roof of your mouth wasn’t singed with the first bite,  they’re too cold. Smoked mash is the one side dish of mine that has been remembered, sought after, stolen, and stood the test of time.

“In the restaurants, I always make way too much and find myself trying to merchandise them in other dishes or turning them into new ‘brilliant’ preparations. A kicky shepherd’s pie, creative duchess croquette, savory pancake — so good with braised pork shoulder — or cheddar-laced fritters.”

But, he says, “None of those dishes were as tasty and as simple to whip together during a mad rush as smoked potato bisque. Sweat out some leek and onion in butter, add chicken stock — not that crap in the aseptic box at the grocery store, make fresh — maybe add a bay leaf or two, bring to a simmer, whisk in an appropriate amount of day-old smoked mash — they’re better in this soup — a touch of cream and bam!”

In addition to his sandwiches, Acre Restaurant executive chef Andrew Adams uses mashed potatoes in dishes served at the restaurant.

“I like to make the super smooth extremely rich Robuchon style mashed potatoes or potato puree,” Adams says. “Five large russet potatoes, one pound butter, salt, and a small amount of hot milk. I treat the process like any emulsion, similar to a béarnaise, by slowly adding the butter and then refinishing with milk.”

Mashed potato concoctions don’t need fancy equipment, Adams says. “Years ago, I was eating at a Michelin three-star restaurant in New York City. After dinner, I was having a drink with the chefs who worked there. I was complimenting their truffle potato foam — when that was still popular — on a seafood dish. The sous chef said he spent weeks with aerators, stabilizers, and other high-tech equipment only for the chef to walk by one day and simply toss a spoonful of mashed potatoes into a white wine sauce and blend. The texture ended up so airy and balanced. Fifteen years later, I tried that. I made a simple sauce with white wine, shallots, milk. Then I added saved mashed potatoes slowly until thickened. To this, I added a little brown butter. And that was it. Last year, this made it to our menu. Now I smoke the potatoes. The final smoked potato sauce goes with our potato gnocchi and short rib dish. The gnocchi with ‘smoked mashed potato’ sauce has been a hit. It’s not listed on the menu that way.”

And, Adams says, “If I have leftover chunky mashed potatoes or some with less butter and other liquids, I will use those sometimes to mix with duck confit or duck breast ‘pastrami’ to make potato-duck croquettes. I just mix duck, mashed potatoes, and egg. That gets molded and breaded, fried.

“On days when we make potato rosemary bread, I’ll ask the crew to save the potatoes for the next day. The potatoes get mixed into the dough. The bread is usually used as the base of our country pork pate.”

Justin Fox Burks and his wife, Amy Lawrence of The Chubby Vegetarian blog and cookbooks, shared their Mashed Potato Dumplings recipe: 

2 cups peeled, cubed potatoes

1 tablespoon water

2 medium eggs (beaten)

1 cup semolina flour

one half teaspoon kosher salt

“Place potatoes and water in a microwave-safe bowl with a lid or a plate to cover. Microwave on high for eight minutes and then allow potatoes to rest, covered, for another eight minutes in the microwave. Mash potatoes with a potato masher and add the eggs, four, and salt. Mix with your hands until just mixed. Pat dough out to about one half inch thickness on a floured surface. Using a pastry cutter or knife, cut dough into roughly one half inch rectangles. Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Cook gnocchi for two to three minutes. When they are ready, they will float. Use a strainer to remove them from the water.

For extra credit, extra flavor, and extra texture, sear the drained gnocchi in olive oil in a skillet on high heat before tossing them with your choice of sauce.”

Burks and Lawrence serve their gnocchi with “a garlicky parsley and walnut pesto or paired with a regular jar of tomato sauce and heaps of grated Romano cheese.”

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News News Blog

Mac Edwards’ Side of the Caritas Story

Mac Edwards

Mac Edwards, who was terminated as executive director of Binghampton’s Caritas Community Center and Cafe on October 1st, is already looking for another job.

“I’m going to look,” Edwards says. “I’m not saying I won’t do something in the restaurant industry. I’m getting a little old to work nights, and my girlfriend has a real job. She works days.”

And, he says, “I’ve been sober 16 years. I’m going to poke around the treatment industry a little bit. I think I’d be pretty good at that. I’m really going to get after it on Monday.”

Edwards, 65, a veteran restaurateur who opened McEwen’s in 1997 and sold it in 2008, also owned Elegant Farmer (later renamed ‘The Farmer’), Brooks Pharm2Fork, and Chandelier in Jackson, Tennessee. He began working at Caritas Village on May 1, 2018.

He was preparing for a neighborhood event when he was let go by Caritas board chairman Blake Barber. “This happened on Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. We had a neighborhood thing in the front yard that night. It was the Neighborhood Night Out and we had one there. Blake Barber insisted on seeing me that night. He asked me if I wanted to resign and I said, ‘No.’ I was terminated. Basically, it just wasn’t working out. I wasn’t the right guy for the job, basically.

“They let me go and there were 75 people in the front yard, including all my employees, grilling hamburgers for the neighborhood. Kids doing chalk art and playing cornhole and putting on Halloween costumes. And here I am taking the walk of shame with all my shit in my arms — saying goodbye to all my employees.”

Says Edwards: “They just basically decided I wasn’t skilled enough in the nonprofit world. They knew the cafe was doing good and the wine dinners and stuff. They said they wanted to do more programming and that kind of stuff. But eight, nine months ago, we had somebody who was willing to be volunteer coordinator and try to find programming and they told her to pump the brakes and kill the whole thing.

“Here we started getting some programming and they pulled the plug. We’re in the black.


“I’m not your typical nonprofit guy. I’m not sure I fit the mold. I say ‘fuck’ too much. And it is a different world. They have their own language. It’s all about ‘measurables’ and ‘deliverables’ and ‘metrics.’ In all fairness to them, I’m not used to answering to people. I had to learn to do that.”

And, he says, “I just think it’s a total disconnect between me and the board; that was a lot of it. I’ll take responsibility for my part, but I don’t think it’s all on me.”

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Mac Edwards is new head of Caritas Village.

It’s a gathering place, a safe place,” says Mac Edwards of Caritas Village. Edwards, who was the driving force behind the restaurants McEwen’s, The Farmer, and Brooks Pharm2Fork, recently took over as executive director of Caritas Village from its founder Onie Johns.

Johns created the community center under the ethos of “love for all people.” Edwards fully buys into the idea. “It was the chance to do something good, something different,” Edwards says of taking the gig.

Like Johns, Edwards lives in the neighborhood, in a blue duplex right across the street from the center. It was part of his compensation package, says Edwards.

Photographs by Justin Fox Burks

Mac Edwards does good at Caritas Village.

As for the restaurant, Edwards says to expect a lot of the old favorites — the sloppy joes, the patty melt — as well as some dishes borrowed from the Farmer.

On a recent afternoon, the special was chicken thighs and legs with mashed potatoes and green beans (plus dessert!). Sides included braised greens and sauteed carrots, zucchini, and yellow squash.

Prices top out at $8, and guests can always pay it forward by adding an extra buck or two to cover the next fellow.

There are grilled cheese sandwiches and a “one story” club, quesadillas, chicken soup, and meat and two plates. More favorites on the menu are the Cobb salad and the veggie burger. The patty for the burger comes from Fuel. Edwards plans to source as much as possible locally. The pasta, for example, is made by Miles Tamboli.

There’s a pot of vegetable beef stew near the door, along with squares of cornbread. Edwards says anyone who needs a meal can get one at Caritas, gratis.

It’s a place where all races, of all stations can break bread.

“Everyone eats together,” Edwards says.

Caritas Village, 2509 Harvard, 327-5246, caritasvillage.org

The Hi-Tone is finally, finally (!) serving food. It’s been a process, says Hi-Tone owner Brian “Skinny” McCabe. It took three-and-a-half years to bulldoze through low-dollar summertimes and “janky-ass” equipment to get to this point.

The menu is spare but creative, designed by Josh McLane. The emphasis here is on hand-held foods. Think of those paper food trays and you’ve got the picture.

There’s the Tapenadchos, with homemade pita chips and olive tapenade and pizzas straight out of your high-school cafeteria (cheese, pepperoni, and sausage). Sandwiches include the Hamtone and the vegetarian Cara. HEELS is a tribute to McLane’s band and is made with bacon, Provolone, spicy peanut butter, and homemade fruit jam. “It’s a beautiful, beautiful marriage,” says McCabe of the sandwich, which he says is straight-up stoner food.

Right now, the Hi-Tone is working out the kinks. Getting the staff used to serving food, correcting the typos on the menu. But, McCabe says, so far so good. Folks are coming after work to eat, or eating before gigs. “I won’t say it’s selling like hot cakes because we don’t serve hot cakes. It’s selling like hot sandwiches,” he says.

Specials start at about $3, and sandwiches run to $9.

One thing that folks can just forget about is the resurrection of the old favorite dishes from the original Hi-Tone. No way, no how. “It’s my Hi-Tone,” McCabe asserts.

Hi-Tone, 412 Cleveland, 490-0335, hitonecafe.com

Cafe 1912 will be marking its 16th year this weekend with menu specials. Much-beloved dishes that have slipped from the menu will reappear. Among them are the pizza with caramelized onions, mushrooms, and gruyere cheese; arugula salad caprese; fried spring roll with vegetables and beef; and veal piccata. The Queen Mother cake with cassis ice cream is being revived from the La Tourelle Menu. Queen Mother Cake is the flourless rich chocolate cake using ground almonds, based on Maida Heatter’s recipe.

Reservations are recommended (722-2700).

Cafe 1912’s 16th anniversary, September 21st-23rd.

Cafe 1912, 243 S. Cooper, 722-2700, cafe1912.com

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Coming soon to Collierville: Brooks Pharm 2 Fork and 148 North.

Mac Edwards is an inside-the-freeways kind of guy, so the thought of an enterprise in Collierville never crossed his mind.

Until he got a phone call.

“The center-cut, filet-mignon spot on the square opened up and fell into my lap,” Edwards, who owns the Farmer on Highland, says.

Cafe Grill owner Andy Chow had retired, leaving the space at 120 Mulberry on the historic square in Collierville up for grabs, and common denominator/commercial real estate agent Steven Levy put the owner of the building, Watty Brooks Hall, and Edwards in touch.

“[Watty Brooks] is terrific, and the rent was right, so it was meant to be, I guess,” Edwards says.

By early July, Edwards will bring his special brand of farm-to-table dining to downtown Collierville in the form of Brooks Pharm2Fork.

The cuisine will be similar to the Farmer — elevated comfort food — but with a few twists to correspond to the bar Edwards will be adding.

“I mean, I’m going to dance with the one who brung me. The food I make is the food I make. I will have a lot of the same items, but having a bar changes the way I approach things, so burger-at-dinner kind of thing,” he says.

He plans on serving lunch seven days a week, dinner at least five nights a week, and he is toying with the idea of serving a take-away breakfast.

He’s almost more excited about the decor than the dishes.

“It’s going to be funky and eclectic. We left the old plaster and some exposed brick. We have this great old receiving desk for the hostess station. My partner [in the Jackson, TN, restaurant Chandelier], Jennifer Dickerson, is doing the interior. It’s going to have this great funky, repurposed feel,” Edwards says.

The name celebrates what else has been housed by those brick and plaster walls over the years, particularly the old pharmacy, Brooks Pharmacy, that the building’s owner grew up in.

“The people of Collierville have really welcomed us and are really excited. It’s exciting what’s going on in Collierville right now with other restaurants opening up on the square. It’s beyond serendipitous,” he says.

Brian Thurmond also never imagined himself enterpris-ing in Collierville.

He never imagined himself making a living doing something as fun as playing with food to begin with.

“I always paid attention to the Food Network and Alton Brown and would tell my mom, ‘Let’s go to the store and grab some stuff and try out some recipes,’ but I never realized the culinary field could be a career,” Thurmond says.

Until he stumbled through the doors of Restaurant Iris a month after it opened and began washing dishes under the tutelage of Kelly English.

“Kelly instilled in me the thought process and the love for food that I didn’t know I had,” Thurmond says.

Thurmond worked his way up through the brigade at Iris, first as garde manger and eventually to chef de cuisine, with some added duties at McEwen’s and Interim and a degree from L’Ecole Culinaire while he was at it.

There was always an agreement between English and Thurmond.

Thurmond would one day be pushed out of the nest to make it on his own as a restaurateur, he just had to let English know when he was ready.

That day came in January 2015, when a place in Collierville, where Thurmond lives with his wife and now-14-month-old daughter, “jumped into their laps.”

“It made perfect sense. I live in Collierville, and my wife was pregnant at the time, so I could get to work in three minutes and have my home life,” Thurmond says.

Edwards and Thurmond will be neighbors come July, when Thurmond will open his French-Southern restaurant, 148 North on the Collierville square.

“The address is 148 N. Main, and the building has a bunch of history. The post office of Collierville was there. The building and its history has so much value to the city, I wanted to continue to build on that,” Thurmond says.

Thurmond’s 148 North

His style of cuisine will build on his roots and his experience, using old family recipes from his grandmother and aunts while preparing them in a traditional French style.

“It’s grits and greens, but also duck confit and pork belly,” he says.

Having Edwards nearby and with talk of other restaurants opening this year, including a Scottish pub-style restaurant late summer/early fall, just creates more momentum for all.

“To be down the street from somebody like Mac, who has been successful for so long, that’s not a rival, that’s a mentor. There will be places I can go to and take a break for lunch. It’s great,” Thurmond says.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Always an Excuse to Go to the Farmer

The Farmer was one of the first to show what farm-to-table means.

I try never to turn down an excuse to go to the Farmer, and what better reason to go than for a good cause. The farm-to-table restaurant — one of the pioneers in Memphis — recently held a benefit for the Bluff City Fellowship, a recovery community in the area, and my fellow Memphians couldn’t resist either. The event sold out with 90 Farmer fans getting on board. 

For $29 diners could choose between a soup or salad, one of three entrees, and from a choice of two desserts.

The soup offered was a sweet potato bisque with the crowd-pleaser, Benton bacon, and marshmallow creme fraiche. The salad was the SG Wedge, with crisp romaine, cherry tomatoes, pickled onions (the best way to eat an onion, IMHO), bleu cheese crumbles, and buttermilk Ranch dressing. I went with the salad, pretty much to save room for dessert.

For the main course, I picked the Savory Chicken Breast, oven roasted with natural jus, red skinned mashed potatoes, and sautéed green beans. I went with the chicken because I will forever be enamored with the Farmer due to my first rendezvous with the restaurant several years ago. My mother and I lunch together about every month, conquering the Memphis restaurant landscape one new establishment at a time. I had never tried the Farmer — back then it was the Elegant Farmer, but in the past year or so dropped the Elegant because of some copyright/trademark/patent/whatever issues — so we met up on Highland Street and were greeted by a warm, jolly “Hello!” from the owner, Mac Edwards.

The Farmer owner Mac Edwards

I will never forget the Oven Roasted Chicken Breast my mother ordered. One bite, and I had been transported back to my homeland, L’hexagone (I am an unapologetic francophile). That’s the thing about the Farmer. Everything is done right. Well. Correctly. And that is what makes it good. No need to wow with portmanteaus or whatever the fashionable import of the month is. The food is the upside of perfectionism.

I do kind of wish I had tried the Lake’s Catfish, a pan-seared filet with citrus orzo, sautéed green beans, and saffron aioli. Lake’s catfish is the best in the region, and I haven’t yet had the pleasure of being swept off my feet by the Farmer’s expertise on the dish. I’m not a big l meat-eater, except when it comes to barbecue, so the Smoked Pork Loin Chop didn’t appeal to me. Edwards and team served up an oven-finished center cut chop with sweet potato hash, sautéed green beans, and BBQ bordelaise. Sounded AMAZE. 

For dessert, there was no chocolate, but there was the strawberry cake recipe that I grew up eating, the one with strawberry Jell-O in the ingredients. It was so sweet my teeth curled. There was also the apple cobbler with cinnamon whipped cream, but I don’t really get cobbler. It doesn’t have any chocolate in it.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Elegant Farmer Name Change

You may have noticed from this Commercial Appeal story that the Elegant Farmer is no longer elegant. The name of the restaurant is now The Farmer

According to Mac Edwards, the change came about to avoid a copyright dispute with a market named the Elegant Farmer in Wisconsin

Edwards, who says he named his restaurant after his parents’ favorite place in California, said it was much simpler and cheaper to change the name to the Farmer. He says that’s how most customers refer to it, in any case. 

In other news, Edwards says he currently working with Jennifer Dickerson on opening two new restaurants by year’s end. 

The Firefly Southern Kitchen in Brighton will have a heavy Farmer influence, says Edwards, while The Chandelier Cafe & Cater in Jackson, TN, will be more of a reflection of Dickerson’s global influences. 

The Chandelier is near the train station in the bottom floor of the Murphy Hotel, which used to be a regular stop of traveling salesmen, according to Edwards. 

Stay tuned … 

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Church Health Center Scores Big Talent for its Fall Culinary Series

Felicia_Willett.png

After the success of its spring culinary series, the Church Health Center (CHC) is coming back for seconds. Beginning in October, they will offer a cycle of weekly cooking classes for the general public, each will feature a prominent local chef.

Some of the big names are Mac Edwards of the Elegant Farmer, Felicia Willett of Felicia Suzanne’s, and Melissa Petersen of Edible Memphis.

“We’re always thinking of new ways to get people in the door,” says Carolyn Nichols, the CHC’s Nutrition Education Coordinator. “And we thought, you know, we’ve got a great demonstration kitchen. Why not let people experience chefs in a different light?”

Classes, which cost $45, include food and wine. In other words, no need to bring anything—just show up. The first class (10/2) will feature Chef Jenn McCullough, who will teach a class called “the Steakhouse Experience.” In it, she will demonstrate how to duplicate fancy restaurant appetizers at home.

Interested, but can’t make it to class? You can also purchase a ticket and donate it to one of the Church Health Center’s less-fortunate clients.

“Not everybody can afford to go to a $45 cooking class,” says Nichols. “For a lot of people, that’s groceries for the week. So for them, this is something really special.”

Classes take place on Thursday, from 6:00 – 7:30 pm. Sign up online, or call (901)-701-2236 for more information.

Sign up online: Fall Culinary Series