Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

The BBQ All Stars Superstore Officially Open

Melissa Cookston, the winningest woman in barbecue, can add another accomplishment to her collection. Her BBQ All Stars Superstore officially opened in Southaven, Mississippi, on Tuesday, December 14th.

And if you’re planning to spend any time around a barbecue pit soon, the new store has you covered with grills, sauces, seasoning, kitchen tools, and plenty of other materials that might be needed.

“I know that there are lots of BBQ and grilling enthusiasts in the Mid-South, and I wanted to create an amazing store for them” Cookston says. “I also wanted to create a store where there will be something for everybody. We’ll carry a big selection of gifts, such as leather travel bags, cutlery, and more. We will have so much space we are going to be able to offer the largest selection of barbecue and outdoor products around and be able to have a large area for cooking classes.”

The superstore contains a wide selection of spices, seasonings, grills, and cookware. (Credit: Melissa Cookston)

The section of the store dedicated to cooking classes will have a large area to accommodate in-person classes, and also boasts audio visual broadcasting and recording capabilities. Classes may range from smoking a whole meal to making sushi.

“The building will also house the World Junior Barbecue League headquarters,” continues Cookston, “so young barbecue enthusiasts will have a place to discuss their barbecue adventures and plans, have BBQ Boot Camps, and get helpful tips from all of the barbecue pros that will be in the store.”

The store will carry many recognizable grill and cooking equipment brands, including Big Green Egg, Primo Grills, Alfa Forni pizza ovens, Traeger Timberline, Green Mountain Grills, Myron Mixon Smokers, Blaze Grills, American Outdoor Grills, Gateway Drum Smokers, Cotton Gin Smokers, and Pitbarrel Smokers.

The store, located in Southaven Commons at 875 Goodman Road, is open seven days a week from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.

Grills galore at The BBQ All Stars Superstore. (Credit: Melissa Cookston)
Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

World Junior Barbecue League Championship Hosted at AutoZone Park

No, that’s not Deep Purple, and the smoke wasn’t exactly on the water — more like about a mile east of the river at AutoZone Park. Last Saturday saw the inaugural edition of Melissa Cookston’s World Junior Barbecue League Championship, in which young adults compete for a cleaver trophy — and $5,000 in prize money. 

A team from Tallulah Falls, Georgia, Pit Vipers B out-cooked six other barbecue teams to take home the Grand Championship, a custom cutting board, the trophy, and $5,000 in the first-ever World Junior Barbecue League Championship. 

“We had a great day watching these teams work together from before sunrise to just before sunset to produce quality barbecue that really impressed our group of seasoned judges,” said Melissa Cookson, World Junior Barbecue League Founder in a statement after the event. “Congratulations to all the teams on a job well done with a special congratulations going to our Chairman’s Reserve grand champions Pit Vipers B from Tallulah Falls High School.” 

“I still can’t believe it,” said Joel Bourlet, Pit Vipers B spokesman. “We are going to use the prize money to buy a new trailer to make traveling and competing easier.” 

Tallulah Falls High School was represented by two barbecue teams, Pit Vipers B and Pit Vipers A. Other teams competing at the event hailed from Memphis, Tennessee; Oxford, Mississippi; and Horn Lake, Mississippi.

Membership in the World Junior Barbecue League is a one-time cost of $25. To learn more about the WJBL, visit the website at worldjrbbqleague.com.  

Complete list of Placements/Winners

Grand Champion

Pit Vipers B, Tallulah Falls High School

Chicken

1st        Pit Vipers A, Tallulah Falls High School

2nd       Thacker Mountain BBQ

3rd        Crosstown BBQ

4th        Pit Vipers B, Tallulah Falls High School

5th        Soaring Swine, Horn Lake High School

6th        Smoking Firebirds, Horn Lake High School

7th        Pigs on the Fly, Horn Lake High School

Ribs

1st        Pit Vipers B, Tallulah Falls High School

2nd       Pit Vipers A, Tallulah Falls High School

3rd        Crosstown BBQ

4th        Pigs on the Fly, Horn Lake High School

5th        Thacker Mountain BBQ

6th        Smoking Firebirds, Horn Lake High School

7th        Soaring Swine, Horn Lake High School

Pork

1st        Pit Vipers B, Tallulah Falls High School

2nd       Crosstown BBQ

3rd        Soaring Swing, Horn Lake High School

4th        Thacker Mountain BBQ

5th        Smoking Firebirds, Horn Lake High School

6th        Pigs on the Fly, Horn Lake High School

7th        Pit Vipers A, Tallulah Falls High School

Brisket

1st        Pit Vipers B, Tallulah Falls High School

2nd       Crosstown BBQ

3rd        Pit Vipers A, Tallulah Falls High School

4th        Soaring Swing, Horn Lake High School

5th        Smoking Firebirds, Horn Lake High School

6th        Pigs on the Fly, Horn Lake High School

7th        Thacker Mountain BBQ

Spirit Award

Pigs on the Fly, Horn Lake High School

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis News News Blog

Melissa Cookston Launches World BBQ League for Youth

Seven-time world barbecue champion Melissa Cookston is cooking up something new. The winningest woman in barbecue announced the launch of the World Junior BBQ League, a nonprofit that aims to engage 14- to 18-year-olds in the wider world of barbecue competitions.

“The world of competitive barbecue has taught me many lessons and made me a better person,” said Cookston in a press release. “Competitive barbecue develops so many skills in a fun, competitive environment where people meet lifelong friends and improve themselves all while enjoying a productive and positive pastime.”

Students who are enrolled in a 9th grade to 12th grade equivalent curriculum will be eligible to join the competition. Alongside honing culinary techniques, the program will also focus on imparting important life skills to participants, such as leadership, teamwork, strategic planning, organizational skills, time management, work ethic, and emotional focus within a competitive environment.

“We hope that by providing a competitive barbecue outlet specifically for young people who are enrolled or in 9th to 12th grade equivalent curriculum with a minimal barrier to entry that we can make a difference in their lives and set them up for success for years to come, through my favorite pastime, barbecue,” said Cookston.

(Credit: Melissa Cookston)

The league’s first championship event is set for Saturday, November 6th, at AutoZone Park. Teams will duke it out for a $20,000 prize by preparing their best chicken thighs, spare ribs, pork butts, and brisket flats. Meat will be provided by the league. There is a $250 fee to enter, and the competition is only open to members of the World Junior BBQ League (which requires a $25 enrollment fee). However, scholarships are available to help cover the costs of membership, competition fees, and supplies.

In addition to the championship, the World Junior BBQ League will also host regular season contests and boot camps around the Mid-South this fall. For more information about enrollment and upcoming events, visit its website.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Cookston to Judge American Barbecue Showdown on Netflix

Melissa Cookston

Mid-South barbecue celebrity Melissa Cookston will judge a Netflix food competition called American Barbecue Showdown, which airs September 18th.

Cookston is the owner of Memphis BBQ Company in Horn Lake, Mississippi and Dunwoody, Georgia. She’s the author of two cookbooks, Smokin’ In the Boy’s Room and Smokin’ Hot in the South. Her wins on the competitive barbecue circuit have earned her the title as the “Winningest Woman in Barbecue.”

Judging the competition with Cookston is Kevin Bludso, founder of Bludso’s BBQ in Los Angeles. The show is hosted by AP Bio star Lyric Lewis and Floor is Lava host Rutledge Wood. Melissa Cookston

Each episode has Cookston and Bludso tasking the contestants — “the best backyard smokers” — with a challenge that will test their barbecue skills “in ways they couldn’t possibly imagine,” reads a news release. “The contestants will have to prove they have the skills to smoke another day while navigating obstacles such as unique meats and old school techniques.” The winner will be dubbed American Barbecue Champion.

“I am thrilled to be a judge on American Barbecue Showdown on Netflix working alongside Kevin Bludso, Lyric Lewis, and Rutledge Wood,” said Cookston. “The contestants were all great and we had so much fun! We can’t wait to watch it when it launches on September 18th”
Melissa Cookston

John Hesling, president of Maverick TV USA, one of the producers of the show, said, “distinct flavors, techniques, creativity, and humor are all on display as our barbecue competitors are put to the test in the hottest battle they’ve ever faced in American Barbecue Showdown.”

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Mike Miller’s Let It Fly Sports Bar slated to open August 26th

Michael Donahue

Mike Miller and David Rodriguez at the Let It Fly Sports Bar media party.

Guests got a sneak peek at Mike Miller’s Let It Fly Sports Bar, where guests will soon be able to eat, drink, and game.

Asked what he wanted the place to be, Miller, Memphis Tigers assistant college basketball coach and former Memphis Grizzlies player, says, “The city’s restaurant. The city’s bar.”

With the emphasis on? “Fun. Good food and fun.”

The media night party, which was held July 23rd at the restaurant at 9091 Poplar in Germantown, emphasized fun and food. Food included a whole hog and the trimmings by Melissa Cookston of Memphis Barbecue Company. Charvey Mac provided the entertainment.

Let It Fly president David Rodriguez says the new venue, which is slated to open August 26th, will serve “elevated food. High-end food and drink.”

Entertainment will include 29 TVs, which sounds staggering for a 4,500 square-foot space.

Let It Fly also will feature two full swing golf simulators, which were up and running at the party.

As for the food, executive chef Rickey Lesley says they will feature a slider bar where guests can create their own sliders, which will be made on site. “We will build it for you,” Lesley says.

These will include sliders made of brisket, chicken, and pulled pork. Let It Fly is partnering with Cookston.

The restaurant also will offer pizzas and 15 different varieties of hot wings.

One of the elevated ingredients used at the restaurant will be “seasoned lime sour cream and homemade salsa,” Lesley says.

Ken Ratliff is Let It Fly CFO and Shellie Kenton is general manager.

MIchael Donahue

Let It Fly Sports Bar media party.

Michael Donahue

Let It Fly Sports Bar media party.

Michael Donahue

Ken Ratliff, Shellie Kenton, David Rodriguez, and Rickey Lesley at the Let It Fly Sports Bar media party.

Michael Donahue

Melissa Cookston at the Let It Fly Sports Bar media party.

MIchael Donahue

Let It Fly Sports Bar media party.

Michael Donahue

Let It Fly Sports Bar media party.


Categories
Cover Feature News

Legends of Memphis Barbecue

Travel outside Shelby County, and the Memphis brand boils down to two things: music and barbecue. Name the city’s music legends. (Go on. We’ll give you a minute. Jeopardy! music plays.) Elvis. Al Green. Otis Redding. B.B. King. Yes, there are many, many others. But your average Bostonian could probably guess at least one of those names. 

But what about barbecue? 

With a sniff of the wind, Memphians can tell if there’s a legit barbecue joint nearby, and, depending on geography, we can probably tell you which one it is and what’s best on the menu. Barbecue is a religion here, and fierce battles rage among devotees of wet ribs or dry rub or whether cole slaw belongs on a pulled-pork sandwich. 

But what do we know about the minds and hands behind those rubbed ribs, those smoky butts, or those sausage-and-cheese plates? Who are the legends of Memphis barbecue? 

The folks we’ve profiled here are big-name barbecue veterans. If you don’t know them, you know their restaurants — Central BBQ, Interstate Barbecue, Charles Vergos’ Rendezvous, Memphis Barbecue Company, and the Bar-B-Q Shop. 

These are not the only legends of Memphis barbecue, of course. Memphians are lucky enough to have platoons of pitmasters working their magic under billowing cloaks of smoke and heat. But if you have to narrow it down to five, these folks are a good place to start.

This week’s Memphis in May World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest will shine a spotlight on the city’s second-biggest cultural export. Expanded now to four days, the contest (which locals simply call “Barbecue”) will bring teams, swine connoisseurs, and revelers of all sorts to Tom Lee Park. Barbecue is the second-biggest weekend on the MIM calendar, behind Music Fest in the number of total visitors. But don’t tell that to the hardcore barbecue believers. To them, it’s a time to let your hair down and to celebrate that simple food that ties us all together. It’s in that spirit that we share the stories of those who made (and keep making) barbecue a big part of our city’s cultural definition.  — Toby Sells

Jim Neely

Jim Neely — Interstate Barbecue

In 1979, native Memphian Jim Neely, an ex-serviceman, was in his mid-40s and operating insurance agencies in Memphis, Nashville, Baton Rouge, and New Orleans. It was a network of offices he’d developed from a single Memphis-based unit seven years earlier, and he was spending a humongous amount of time on the road overseeing them all.

Driving back to Memphis, usually late at night, he’d often find himself coping with a serious appetite, and he would think back to when he was growing up in Memphis and, as he puts it, “Every neighborhood had their own great little barbecue place.” 

Not the big chains nor even large restaurants as such. Just little store fronts, each with a distinctive delectable home-grown menu. But, as Neely noticed, “By the mid-’70s, all the owners of those places had begun to die out, and the places with them.”

So, Neely decided to switch career tracks and bought a mom-and-pop grocery store at the intersection of Third and Mallory. He converted an unused space on the property into a makeshift barbecue stand, all the while experimenting with recipes in an effort to recapture the flavor of those long-gone neighborhood places.

Here it is, 38 years later, and that mom-and-pop grocery store has expanded and morphed into a state-of-the-art barbecue restaurant, “Jim Neely’s Interstate BarBQ,” as the sign on it and three other Neely-owned restuarants (in the airport area, on Winchester, and on Stateline) will tell you. 

Such is their renown that most Memphis residents (and many tourists) would likely answer “barbecue” if given the name “Neely” on a word-association test. In fact, for many years some Neely nephews used the family name on a local barbecue chain of their own. But, as visitors are instructed by a sign on the side of the flagship Third Street place (“My Holy Grail,” Neely calls it), it was Jim Neely who “Put the Name in BBQ” and “Before Me There Was None.”

Everything about the Neely restaurants bears an individual touch, including the locally celebrated cole slaw, which his wife, Barbara, makes fresh every day. In the matter of cooking, Neely says, only half-facetiously, “I am like a Marine drill sergeant. There’s only one way to do things — my way.” 

Neely devised his own pits, using a combination of steel plates and brick (“both fire bricks and common bricks”) and cooks with “natural gas combined with hickory wood and charcoal.” He boasts that no fire ever touches the meat, which is cooked with indirect heating via a tunnel in the pit. The process generates a natural moisture that marinates the meat, which is “tenderized in its own juices.”

Besides the various ways in which one can order and eat barbecued pork, Neely offers an elaborate menu of other items, including spaghetti, chicken wings, and beef. He takes great pride in the latter, maintaining that his was the first barbecue place in this area to offer beef brisket, and that his beef ribs, “which I get shipped in,” are twice as thick as anybody else’s. 

His barbecue sauce, too, prepared from a closely guarded recipe, is the product of years of experimentation.

Neely is both a chef and the same dedicated entrepreneur he was in his insurance-business days. He’ll be 80 in October and has no intention of slowing down. 

— Jackson Baker

Eric Vernon

Frank and Eric Vernon — The Bar-B-Q Shop

As I’m interviewing Frank and Eric Vernon, the father-and-son team behind the Bar-B-Q Shop, Eric suddenly jumps up to greet a man coming in the door. It’s James Alexander, the legendary bass player of the Bar-Kays. 

“He’s been coming here since it was Brady and Lil’s,” Eric says. 

Frank Vernon says he started as a backyard pitmaster. At the time, the Vernons had their own small restaurant, called Frank’s. But Brady and Lil’s was a family favorite. 

“When I didn’t cook, I would go by there and get my ribs, barbecue, and barbecue spaghetti,” Frank recalls. “It was a favorite of Willie Mitchell. All the Stax people used to go there because it was just down the road.” 

Mr. Brady and Frank became close friends. When it came time to retire, he asked the Vernons if they would take over the restaurant. 

“The sauce came from Mr. Brady,” Frank says. “At one time, he didn’t want to give it to us. He wanted to make it for us, which was a bad idea. We told him we wanted to think about it.”

Brady called them over to his house later. “He said, I’m just going to give you the sauce when you buy the business,” Frank said. He then signed a Bible and presented it to the Vernons, sealing the deal.

Frank tweaked the sauce recipe over the years to make it cling tighter to the ribs. Now, Eric makes more than 40 gallons per week from scratch at the Madison restaurant, and the bottled version is sold in more than 140 Kroger stores from the Missouri bootheel to the Delta. But the Shop first gained notoriety for barbecue spaghetti. 

“That spaghetti has been around over 50 years,” Frank says. “It’s something unique. Everybody’s got a barbecue spaghetti now, but they don’t have the one that we have.”

The shop’s Texas Toast barbecue sandwich was Frank’s invention. He says the entire meal is carefully balanced. 

“That Texas Toast and the slaw and the meat, they all complement themselves and enhance themselves,” Frank says. “I don’t care if [another restaurant] goes and uses the Texas Toast. They ain’t gonna get the same flavor.”  

Frank developed a glaze for barbecue chicken and then became curious how it would taste on pork ribs. In 2015, the glazed ribs were named Best Barbecue Plate in America by the Food Network.  

The Shop’s proximity to Ardent Studios has made it a favorite of musicians, from Mavis Staples to Bobby “Blue” Bland to ZZ Top’s Billy Gibson, who has a favorite table. 

“DJ Paul and them would pull up in a Range Rover and order ribs with the dry seasoning, back in the day when they were recording down the street,” says Eric. “We fed Justin Timberlake’s crew when they did a concert here.” 

Frank recalls when “We used to close at 2 o’clock on Monday. One Monday, at about five minutes to 2, Luther Vandross’ bus drove up. They came in here and got every rib we had in the house.”

The Vernons are consummate restaurant professionals, and it’s the loyalty of their customers that keeps them going. “The great thing about this business is when you walk out of the kitchen and see customers that you’ve been knowing for years,” Frank says. “Or you go up to a table that has never been here before, and they say, ‘This is great! Keep doing what you’re doing!’ And then you see them again.” — Chris McCoy

Roger Sapp & Craig Blondis

Craig Blondis & Roger Sapp — Central BBQ

Barbecue was a byproduct of kicks and cleats, says Craig Blondis, who co-owns Central BBQ with Roger Sapp.

“Roger and I knew each other from playing soccer, which is really how this whole thing started,” he says.

Both had cooked on other barbecue teams, but as members of the Vagrants soccer team, Blondis and Sapp participated together in a barbecue cooking team in the Memphis in May World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest. 

“Roger and I and all the soccer guys had a cooking team that, basically, we would enter as a Dutch international team, because a couple of guys we played soccer with were from Holland,” Blondis says.

They called the team “Keujes Van Doorenburg,” which means “Pigs from Doorenburg” says Hans Bermel, who was one of the Dutch members of the team. Bermel is now an owner of Bermel Hair Salon.

The barbecue restaurant began after Sapp bought the old Tony’s Pizza building and property on Central. He didn’t know what to do with it, so he said, “Let’s open a barbecue joint.”

A couple of high profile Midtown barbecue restaurants had closed. “The Public Eye closed,” Sapp says. “John Wills closed. Central BBQ was the perfect name,” he says, because “everybody goes up and down Central.”

The first Central BBQ opened on April 1, 2002. Blondis and Sapp later opened locations on Summer and on Butler in the South Main area near the National Civil Rights Museum. 

Along with Ryan Trimm of Sweet Grass, they are currently in the process of opening Sunrise Memphis, a breakfast restaurant in the old Neely’s restaurant on Jefferson. A 250-seat event center is going to be built on property behind the Summer restaurant within the next two months, Sapp says.

Why did Central BBQ catch on so fast? 

“We didn’t copy the Rendezvous,” Sapp says. “We had our own style, and we went and stuck with it.”

“We use a rotisserie convection-style pit,” Blondis says. “It’s basically gas-fed. The smoke source comes from the wood. It’s like a furnace or a heater in your house.”

They cook their ribs “dry style,” rubbing the meat with spices, then letting it marinate overnight, before smoking it. 

“By doing that, you’re creating a thicker bark,” Blondis says. “You’re going to get more flavor in the bark as well. That’s really where you’re getting the smoke, but you’re also getting the flavor of the spices that are in there. And it creates a much better product. 

“Sauce is meant to be an accompaniment. People who cook with sauce are hiding the fact that they’re not cooking their barbecue properly.

“Down in Helena at King Biscuit [Blues Festival] I’ve taken grand championship first place in ribs a couple of times,” Blondis says. “But my contest is opening these doors every day at 11 a.m.” — Michael Donahue

Melissa Cookston

Melissa Cookston — Memphis Barbecue Co. 

It was a cold wet weekend in Greenwood, Mississippi. The tent poles had been lost, so Melissa Cookston slept on a tarp under a warm grill. She was seven months pregnant. It was her first barbecue competition. 

“It was terrible,” she says. 

But she’d been practicing for weeks to get up the nerve to enter, and she didn’t want to quit. She persisted, and eventually, a shaft of golden sunlight cut through the dreary scene; she and her team won fifth place in the shoulder category (the only one they entered).

“Back then, you’d have 100 teams in a small competition; it was crazy!” Cookston says, with traces of that original excitement still in her voice. “I will tell you that was like winning Memphis in May to me.”

That victory ignited a flame inside Cookston. She and her husband eventually quit their jobs to focus on competition barbecue and later opened a barbecue restaurant (Memphis Barbecue Co. in Horn Lake). Her team competed and won on TLC’s BBQ Pitmasters. Cookston was later asked to join the show as a judge for two seasons. 

She’s written two books, Smokin’ in the Boys’ Room and Smokin’ Hot in the South. Along with tips and recipes, both books include Cookston’s best-known and well-earned titles, the “most winningest woman in barbecue” and “the only female barbecue world champion.”

Winning the Memphis in May World Championship Cooking Contest is, arguably, like winning the Super Bowl. Cookston’s team has won that title twice (2008, 2010). They’ve come in second (2012), won ribs (2012), and the whole hog category four times (2010, 2011, 2012, 2014). 

But it was that first win on that cold, wet weekend in Greenwood that hooked her.

“Competition barbecue is an addiction,” she said. “You win, like, third place in baked beans, and, before you know it, you’re rolling down the road with a $30,000 rig. It’s terrible. It worse than crack.” 

But competitive barbecue is a business for Cookston. Regular practice sessions are staged, timed, and judged just like a real cooking contest. In the past seven years, no alcohol was allowed in her MIM tent (though, she’s making an exception this year). 

And this year, Cookston is coming to Tom Lee Park with a secret weapon. Over the last two-and-a-half years, she has bred, fed, and raised hogs of her own. Calling herself Frankenstein, Cookston says she cross-bred two types of hogs “to see if I could create the utopian hog for whole-hog cooking.” 

Symbols of Cookston’s competition cooking success — trophies, plaques, and more — adorn the walls of her restaurant, where dozens of customers were already seated just a few ticks after noon on a recent weekday visit. 

“We made a promise when we opened this place that we’d do things the right way, and we’ve kept that promise,” Cookston says. “People have appreciated it. Everybody’s happy to be eating good barbecue.”  — Toby Sells

Bobby Ellis

John Vergos — Charles Vergos’ Rendezvous

Thanks to a coal chute, the Rendezvous, begun by the late Charlie Vergos in 1948, now sells 8,000 pounds of ribs five days a week.

“It started out as a tavern with ham and cheese sandwiches,” says Charlie’s son, John Vergos. “It wasn’t until he discovered the old coal chute that he started to experiment. I don’t know if it was behind bricks or what, but once he started burning something, he could see that it drew and he knew that he was in business.”

His dad had some racks built and “started experimenting with all kinds of things. Ribs were actually a by-product. They were thrown away. He would get them for 10 cents a pound.”

At that time, people ate ribs on the Fourth of July and Memorial Day. They also were sold in some grocery stores. But his dad was the first in Memphis to sell them “in a regular commercial restaurant,” Vergos says, and the restaurant still uses his father’s “exact same recipe.” 

“He first started cooking them Greek style, where you baste them in lemon and vinegar, salt, pepper, oregano, and garlic,” Vergos says. “But then he went to New Orleans and got all the Cajun spices, and he mixed them together. So, that’s the same recipe we use today.”

They don’t use a barbecue pit at the Rendezvous. “They’re grilled; they’re smoked; and they’re charcoaled,” Vergos says. “It’s all happening at the same time. They’re cooked over charcoal, but the smoke’s created. So, you have that flavor. Plus, they’re being grilled.”

Asked to describe the ribs, Vergos says, “First of all, they don’t fall off the bone. We think ribs need to be chewed.” As for the taste, he says, “I love the taste. It’s not a heavy taste. Beause of the vinegar in it, it’s a fresh taste. There’s about 12 spices in our seasoning and they just all go together. The sum of the whole is much better than the individual parts. When you put it together, there’s just an indescribable taste. It’s sustained us for almost 70 years.”

People call Bobby Ellis the “pit master,” but Vergos says, “He’s not a pit master. He’s our kitchen manager. Bobby’s cooked for years and years, but now he runs the place. Bobby’s probably the most important person in the restaurant because he’s been here 46 years. He knows every outlet, every door. He knows every vendor, every maintenance person. He knows where he can get things done. I’m much easier to replace than Bobby.”

Each night, three people do the cooking at Rendezvous, Vergos says. “There are more than that working in the kitchen.”

In addition to ribs, the Rendezvous serves barbecued chicken, pork chops, and brisket. Charlie Vergos once served barbecued bear to Buford Ellington, who was Tennessee governor at the time.

“My dad didn’t realize when you cook bear meat you’re supposed to boil it first to get a bunch of fat out of it,” Vergos says. “If you don’t, once you start eating it, it expands in your mouth.” And that’s what was happening to Ellington when Charlie looked at him. 

“He was turning green because he was choking,” Vergos says. “It had gotten lodged in his throat. [Charlie] claimed he invented the Heimlich maneuver because he grabbed [Buford] and pushed his chest.”

His dad was relieved when everything came out okay. 

“He was just [imagining] the headlines: ‘Governor Dies. Chokes at Rendezvous.'”  — MD

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Nacho Ordinary Coffee, etc.

Gary Cluck traveled a lot for his job, and while on the road, he got hooked on good coffee. He joined some clubs, took some classes. Then, he bought his own roaster. He began giving away bags to family and friends, who urged him, “You need to get this to people,” he says. 

And so he did. He recently launched Nacho Ordinary Coffee, which sells small-batch coffees online for about $14 per bag. 

Nacho is the family dog. “She’s such a sweetheart,” Cluck says. “She’s not your typical chihuahua.”

Cluck says the coffees he offers tend to be medium roast. He will typically offer two coffees from two different countries and never blends. 

• Barbecue champ Melissa Cookston is opening a steakhouse in Southaven, Steaks by Melissa

* Downtown Dining Week is set for November 7-13. 

• Jeff Johnson’s Green Room is holding its first pop-up restaurant this weekend. Chef Daniele Zucca will lead the meal. Dinner includes Lasagna Alla Bolognese and pumpkin ravioli in brown butter. Details here

Pimento’s Kitchen and Market is set to open at 6450 Poplar on Wednesday. This is a sister restaurant of Holiday Ham and serves breakfast, lunch, and dinner. 

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Two New Barbecue Books Hit Shelves

It’s that time of year again when the skies of Memphis take on a similar look to that of L.A., but instead of smog generated from an overpopulation of single-occupancy vehicles filling the atmosphere, an inundation of smokers, pits, and cookers cover the Memphis skyline in a haze of heavenly swine-scented smoke.
Two books just hit the shelves, and the matrix, Tuesday, and they offer a couple of ways you can contribute to the seasonal pork-infused smog, either by way of cooking cob roller yourself or by educating dilettantes on original authentic barbecuing.

As if winning multiple world barbecue cooking championships, opening several successful barbecue restaurants, and publishing her own cookbook weren’t enough, pitmaster Melissa Cookston is at it again, this time with a new cookbook. Smokin’ Hot in the South (Andrews McMeel Publishing, $22.99) serves as a collection of grilling recipes that takes traditional Southern ingredients and recipes and approaches them from a new angle.

There’s grilled coconut cake, green tomato pizza sauce (with smoked chicken and truffle crema!), butterbean pate, and green tomato salsa.

“I’ve taken simple Southern ingredients and kicked it up a notch so that they are used in unique ways,” Cookston says. “For most people, the kitchen is their comfort zone. I like to take cooking outside. That’s what it’s all about.”

Before there were divisions and categories and sections and parts, and before there were options such as gas and electricity, there was wood and coal and a 200-pound hog and a man (and probably a woman, too). And with those minimal elements came stories and scars and hazards and a culture, and Louisiana native Rien Fertel fell in love with all of it.

Fertel recently released The One True Barbecue: Fire, Smoke, and the Pitmasters Who Cook the Whole Hog (Touchstone, $25), a hybrid travelogue, history, and homage to the disappearing culture of pitmasters who cook whole hogs over wood-fired coals.

“I fell in love with and romanticized what they did, and I became obsessed with the barbecue that they made,” Fertel, of New Orleans, says. “The book is about the process and the food, but really it’s about the people who stick with the tradition and stubbornly adhere to a culinary art form that doesn’t really make sense.”

There are stories of scarred arms from grease splatters, exploding pigs from a combination of grease hitting the fire in just the right way, and the fact that there are only 10 traditional whole-hog pitmasters left in the U.S., including the two children of Ricky Parker who run their father’s barbecue restaurant, Scott’s Parker’s BBQ in Lexington, Tennessee.

Fertel will appear at the Booksellers at Laurelwood Sunday, May 15th at 2 p.m. for a book signing.