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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Guess Where I’m Eating Contest 100

To celebrate the 100th entry in this contest, we’re offering a super-cool prize this week: 2 tickets to Margarita Festival

The festival, hosted by the Flyer, features local restaurants competing to win the Best Margarita in Memphis title. Guests get to sample and vote for their favorites.

The event sold out last year.

A nice treat for a hot day … I managed to get this all over me and my car. 

The first person to correctly ID the dish and where I’m eating wins the 2 tickets. 

To enter, submit your answer to me via email at ellis@memphisflyer.com

The answer to GWIE 99 is the Mellow Mushroom in East Memphis, and the winner is … Jenny Robertson! 

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

The Best Gluten-Free Pizza in Memphis

Has there ever been a more hated foodstuff than gluten?

The proliferation of gluten-free pizza on local menus is indicative of this ill will held by celiacs and gluten-intolerants alike. Heck, some people choose to be gluten-free (GF) just because they can! This is America after all.

When it comes to deciding who has the best gluten-free pizza in town, it’s a hard thing to judge. Andria Brown, who was diagnosed with celiac disease a couple of years ago, explains, “Non-GF people just shouldn’t eat it, and GF people’s opinions vary depending on how long it’s been since they had real pizza. In general, the thinner, crispier crusts are better because they’re not trying to be soft and chewy.”

Leigh Espy, who is gluten-intolerant, agrees. “Gluten-free crust is not the same — you don’t get that lovely chewy texture, but I’ve always preferred the thin, crispy crust anyway.”

Of course, depending on how much you hate gluten (and how much it hates you), cross-contamination factors must be considered as well. Here’s an overview of your current options:

Mellow Mushroom

Annica Kreider, VP of brand development, says Mellow Mushroom began offering gluten-free crust several years ago as a result of requests from guests who were no longer able to enjoy pizza. It is celiac-safe. ”We pride ourselves on this aspect of our program. Our cooks have been trained on the importance of preventing cross-contamination,” Kreider says. The kitchen staff will wash their hands, put on fresh gloves and a fresh apron, and only use gluten-free dedicated cooking utensils and ingredients. Everything is made to order and prepared in a separate area. A screen pan is used during the baking process so the gluten-free crust never makes direct contact with the pizza stone. ”While realizing that a gluten-free crust would likely never taste the same as our signature Mellow dough, our goal was to deliver a flavor profile that was just as delicious as our regular crust for the gluten-free audience,” explains Kreider. 

It has totally different ingredients from the regular crust, which is thicker. “A combination of ancient grains really gives it a delicious and hearty flavor, and it crisps up very nicely.  We also were able to make it vegan in the reformulation,” she says.

The crust is very popular, thanks to a dedicated marketing campaign.

mellowmushroom.com

Rock’n Dough Pizza Co.

Amanda Denno says at Rock’n Dough they had a substantial customer demand for a gluten-free and/or low-carb option. “Some people simply preferred to eat low-carb, and other people needed to avoid gluten due to dietary sensitivities or gluten allergies,” she says.

They use a pizza crust mix from local Memphis company Nourishe and prepare it in-house. The crust mix itself is 100-percent gluten-free, however, Rock’n Dough prepares this dough mix in a kitchen where flour containing gluten is heavily used. Steps they take to minimize gluten cross-contamination include storing it separately from other ingredients in a sealed container and preparing the gluten- and grain-sensitive dough at different times than gluten-containing dough.

“We take care to minimize cross-contamination, but it is possible that small amounts of gluten do get incorporated. For this reason, we cannot guarantee the crust we serve in the restaurant is 100 percent gluten free,” Denno says. This pizza crust is therefore not suitable for people with severe gluten allergies or reactions. It is listed as “gluten- and grain-sensitive” on the menu, and they train their staff to discuss the possibility of cross-contamination with their guests so they can be fully informed. 

Denno says the crust tastes great. It contains nut, seed, and root vegetable flours and is naturally free from gluten, grains, and soy. It is also lower in carbohydrates than many other gluten-free products and is Paleo-diet friendly. “Nourishe specializes in great-tasting gluten-free products, and we specialize in great pizza — when you combine them, it is the best!” she says.

Rock’n Dough does not currently offer gluten-free on their food truck, but they do offer it for private catering events, where the menu is decided prior to the event.

rockndoughpizza.com

Pyro’s Fire Fresh Pizza

Co-owner Chad Foreman says Pyro’s offers a gluten-free crust that many guests, both those with celiac disease and those just wanting to minimize gluten in their diets, really like.  “Our gluten-free crust is made with rice flour, and we offer to cook it in a pan for our more sensitive guests,” he says.

However, they do not offer a 100-percent gluten-free experience. “We do not recommend any of our products for individuals that are extremely sensitive. Since we make our signature thin crust in-house everyday with flour and semolina, our restaurant has gluten particles everywhere, which makes cross-contamination virtually impossible to avoid,” Foreman explains. This cross-contamination means that although their rice-based crust is gluten-free, most of the toppings and the oven they cook it in are not gluten-free.  

Guests are pleasantly surprised by how light and airy the crust is.  

pyrospizza.com

Russo’s New York Pizzeria

Chef Anthony Russo spent two years perfecting the recipe for his gluten-free crust. The secret is that it is bound together with honey and a Sicilian olive oil made specifically for Russo’s.

Jackson Lewis, the franchise’s PR representative, says there is a serious need for great-tasting gluten-free options, and because of this, Russo’s offers guests an entirely gluten-free menu. Additionally, the retail version of the gluten-free pizza is sold in 3,000 grocery stores across the United States.

Local franchise owner, Brett Steiner, says to prevent cross-contamination in the Germantown store, they keep the pizza crust in a separate cooler and change their gloves prior to making the order. The crust is very popular. They sell at least 50 a week.

nypizzeria.com

Hog & Hominy

Hog & Hominy makes its gluten-free dough in-house. For a $3 upcharge, all pizzas on the menu can be made gluten-free. They keep the dough separate and roll it separately, but it isn’t guaranteed to be 100-percent safe for celiacs because regular flour is used throughout the kitchen.

hogandhominy.com

Ciao Bella

Ciao Bella orders a gluten-free, pre-baked, 12-inch crust from a company in New Jersey called Conte’s Pasta through their specialty foods distributor. It is prepared with separate utensils, but it is prepared in the same pizza station as the rest of the pizzas and cooked and in the same pizza oven as everything else.

ciaobellamemphis.info

Memphis Pizza Cafe

MPC also orders a frozen gluten-free crust. Like Ciao Bella, they use separate utensils, but it is prepared and cooked in the same station/oven as regular pies.

memphispizzacafe.com

Chuck E. Cheese’s

Chuck E. Cheese’s has a gluten-free pizza that comes in a sealed, oven-safe bag. It isn’t opened until it gets to the table, and a one-time-use pizza cutter is provided. It’s celiac safe, but rumor has it, not very tasty!

chuckecheese.com

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Triple Order

You may recognize Jeremy Denno, owner of the new Rock ‘n’ Dough Pizza Co. off Ridgeway, as the man behind the pizzas at Trolley Stop Market. Or you may have seen him captaining the ever-popular Rock ‘n’ Dough mobile pizza kitchen. And neither of those things has changed.

“I still do dough for Trolley Stop, and I still do the truck,” he says, sitting in his new, hip but casual pizza joint. “Once I get this place running and get everyone cross-trained to work here and in the truck, we’ll be going full-steam again. It’s just that everybody kept asking me, ‘Where’s your restaurant located?’ Or, ‘When are you going to come to East Memphis?'”

Two weeks ago, Denno did just that, opening the doors to his first brick-and-mortar venture next door to Amerigo in the Park Place Mall shopping center. Rock ‘n’ Dough is a family affair: Denno and his wife Amanda own the spot, his brother Nathan is the kitchen manager, and his mother Kathleen runs the front of the house.

The small, well-decorated corner spot features a nice lunch special — $6 to $9 for pizza by-the-slice, small salad, and a drink — and turns out full pies as well, lunch or dinner. Only two weeks in, Denno is already looking toward a bigger menu and more kitchen gear.

“We’re going to do gluten-free dough; we’re going to do pretzel dough and get a meat grinder to do our own brats wrapped in pretzel dough; we’re getting a smoker to do real barbecue pizzas,” Denno says. “I only have a pizza oven now, so I can’t really cook beyond oven roasting, but once I get all the tools in place, we’re going to do homemade meatball subs, homemade chicken Parm subs. The menu you see now is just to get the ball rolling.”

The current menu is nothing to sneer at, either. You can get Denno’s hearty pizza crust — crispy on the outside, chewy on the inside — topped with a wide range of fresh ingredients, including veggies, meats, and nine types of cheese, as well as the non-dairy cheese, Daiya, for vegans. They’ve got sodas by the can and bottle, sparkling water, and fresh-squeezed lemonade. The dining room only seats 18, but the by-the-slice system makes a walk-about pizza lunch easy to maneuver. Soon, Denno hopes to have a delivery system up and running within a certain radius in East Memphis.

Rock ‘n’ Dough is open Monday through Wednesday, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m., Thursday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., and, starting soon, Sundays from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Rock ‘n’ Dough Pizza Co., 1243 Ridgeway (435-6238) @rockndoughpizza

The local Mellow Mushroom pizza franchise is opening a second location, this time at 5138 Park Avenue in East Memphis, in the former AAA building.

“It’s a cool and unique building,” owner Cary Fairless says. “We have a great location here in Germantown, but it’s in a strip center so there’s not really anything unique to it. We wanted something that might have a signature. It’s a late-’60s, early-’70s bank building, and it’s round. You just don’t see that many round buildings.”

The decor will be sort of retro-future: what the future looked like to Memphians in the ’60s and ’70s. The drive-thru will be converted into a patio with a small outdoor stage. If all goes according to plan, construction should begin by the end of this month.

Fairless and his wife Lori opened the Germantown Mellow Mushroom in 2010. This East Memphis location, which they own with business partner Andy Harvey, should be open sometime this summer. The hours and menu will be more or less the same as the other location, but Fairless hopes to have a larger variety of beers available — a total of 50, compared to Germantown’s 30.

Mellow Mushroom, 3075 Village Shops Drive in Germantown (907-0243)

mellowmushroom.com

Broadway Pizza‘s East Memphis location is under way on Mendenhall behind the Belmont Grill and should be open by late spring or early summer.

The original, circa-1977 location on Broad Avenue isn’t going anywhere. East Memphians will just have easier access to their Broadway Pizza favorites, like the Broadway Special, a kitchen-sink pizza with meat toppings plus a bunch of veggies. The new location will carry over the prices and beer and wine offerings of the original but is looking to add delivery to its services.

“It’s something we’d thought about for a while, and that building happened to come up,” says manager Andrew Ishee, whose parents, Denny and Dewana, own the pizzeria. “It’s going to be the same food, same products, same recipes. We’re just moving to a different part of town to keep people from having to drive as far.”

Broadway Pizza, 2581 Broad (454-7930)

broadwaypizzamemphis.com

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Vegan Cheese at Mellow Mushroom

When I went vegan in 2004, I thought my cheese pizza-ordering days were over. I knew I could make a vegan cheese pizza at home or order a cheese-less veggie pizza when dining out. But stringy, melty vegan cheese offered at a pizzeria in Memphis? That was never going to happen.

But fast forward to last Thursday when I ordered my first vegan cheese-covered pie at Mellow Mushroom in Germantown.

Daiya_Mellow_Mushroom_Whole.JPG