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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Memphis Sandwich Clique (the Kitchen) to Open at Rec Room

Ryan Joseph Hopgood is the owner/operator of Memphis Sandwich Clique, the new kitchen slated to open in June inside Rec Room.

And, yes, that’s the same Ryan Joseph Hopgood who started the popular Memphis Sandwich Clique Facebook group and Instagram page.

“I’m the owner/operator of the kitchen inside of Rec Room,” says Hopgood, 27. “It’s new and improved.”

Until the kitchen opens inside Rec Room, Memphis Sandwich Clique will be open in a food truck beginning with 3000 Broadfest, which will be held Saturday, June 5th. 

The Rec Room Memphis Sandwich Clique is affiliated with the social media Memphis Sandwich Clique, which highlights sandwiches, Hopgood says. “I am the founder of Memphis Sandwich Clique. I created it. Yes, there is still a group website and Instagram page.”

The online Memphis Sandwich Clique began July 2019. “This absolutely has to do with that. That is basically the marketing aspect of that.”

Including some of “the city’s best sandwiches,” Hopgood says, “We’re going to have some non-sandwich items.”

They also will serve “some healthy food options” to coincide with Rec Room’s new Kokoon Yoga and 901 Kettlebell Club, which will open June 5th. 

“I’m going to be the sole food operator for all the businesses inside. I’m going to be making weekly specials,” Hopgood says. “I’m going to highlight basically healthy and then bar food at the same time. For every unhealthy item, I want a healthy item to counteract that.”

Other businesses will include tattoo artist Babak’s studio, which is called Goatplow Tattoos, and Civil Axe Throwing. 

Two chefs will work under Hopgood, who will help create the dishes. “We’re going to have specials we’re going to run.”

For 3000 Broadfest, Hopgood says the menu, created by athletic performance chef Ann Drum, will include a hot ham sandwich, a “chicken sammy,” a hamburger, an “avocado chicken sammy,” Zoodle pad thai, Vietnamese egg rolls, avocado fries, and hummus cookie dough for dessert.

Hummus Cookie Dough

All those items and more will be regularly included at Memphis Sandwich Clique, Hopgood says.

Hopgood was a natural fit for the job, says Martha Hample, one of the Rec Room operating partners. “Ryan has an immense local following on social,” she says, “so we had seen him on social and started talking about how we needed something relatively simple to execute.”

They already have Rawgirls, who will be serving juices, so they wanted to keep a healthy component in some dishes. “We couldn’t be doing the frozen pizzas like we were doing. We had to come up with something more inventive that would work with the other businesses.”

Like the other Rec Room businesses, Hopgood’s Memphis Sandwich Clique kitchen will be leased from the Rec Room, Hample says. “That’s how we changed our model, to become more of like a little miniature Minglewood.”

For Broad Fest, Rec Room will open at 9 a.m. June 5th. 901 Kettlebell Club will begin at 9:30 a.m. Activities will continue until 12:45 a.m. June 5th. Vendors will include Metro Hemp Supply. Hampline Brewing Company will be doing a tap takeover.

Rec Room now includes a newly built outdoor stage. Jack Oblivian, Josh & Jeremy, Turnstiles, and Lucky 7 Brass Band will perform Saturday, June 5th.

Rec Room is at 3000 Broad Avenue.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Clique HQ — a “Sandwich Speakeasy” — Slated to Open in January

Ryan Joseph Hopgood, Keun Anderson, and Reuben Skahill of Clique HQ.



You won’t see a door with a peephole that opens so you can say, “G Reub sent me,” but  Clique HQ, a  “sandwich speakeasy,” is slated to open in January in a brick-and-mortar building, where members of the Memphis Sandwich Clique Facebook group can order sandwiches.

So, all you have to do is join Memphis Sandwich Clique and you can order one of the sammies.

“We’ve got one of the best chefs in town doing our menu,” says Reuben “G Reub” Skahill. “We’re going to create sandwiches and wings and egg rolls.”

Skahill, Ryan Joseph Hopgood, and chef Keun Anderson are the the guys behind the project.

“It’s a to-go place where you get served in your car by me with a briefcase with your food in it,” Skahill says. “I’ll come to your car.”

And, he says, it’s going to be “a very exclusive place.”

They’re using a Mafia theme, he says. “You know how the Mafia uses delis as fronts for their businesses? We’re using the Mafia as a front for our business.”

Describing the “Don Sandwich,” one of the menu items, Skahill says, “It’s turkey, slaw, honey mustard, and pepper jack cheese on a toasted Gambino (bakery) roll.”

Updates, photos, and videos will be posted on Memphis Sandwich Clique, which Skahill says, “highlights the brightest sandwiches and sandwich minds in the city. And possibly the world.”

Also, he says, updates will be posted “by word of mouth.”

And, Skahill says, “We will post pics of actual sandwiches you can order on Memphis Sandwich Clique and Shook Memphis (local Memphis products blog) social media.”

They’re already working on the menu, Skahill says. “We have our sandwiches on paper and we’re making those sandwiches today.”

Skahill doesn’t want to say much right now. “I want it to have an air of mystery.”

But, he says, “We’re legal and licensed to sell these sandwiches.”

 As for the official opening date, Skahill says, “We don’t have a set date. We might change the menu a couple of times.”



Where is it going to be? “There are those that say that it’s located at 813 Ridge Lake Blvd., but nobody alive can confirm or deny it.”

Skahill is “super excited” about the new restaurant. “This is actually an opportunity for us to legitimately change the city’s landscape on sandwiches.”

As of right now, Skahill, Hopgood, and Anderson aren’t wearing pinstripe suits. “If you have a vest or a fedora I could borrow, I could use it,” Skahill says. “But I do have a briefcase with a combination lock on it for unmarked bills or sandwiches.”

Skahill, a rapper, says “G Reub” is short for his rapper name “Gangsta Reuben.”

And, he says, “If you listen closely to the streets, you might hear the Clique anthem coming out soon.”

Stay tuned.

Wings from Clique HQ.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Memphis Sandwich Clique Hosts Online Sandwich Challenges

Memphis Sandwich Clique is a phenomenon. The Facebook group began last July with Ryan Joseph Hopgood and Reuben Skahill asking people to post their favorite sandwiches.

Membership grew faster than someone could devour a finger sandwich.

“We started out with 100,” Hopgood says. Membership now is at 12,900.

Michael Donahue

The clique: Ryan Joseph Hopgood (left) and Reuben Skahill

Because of COVID-19, Memphis Sandwich Clique is adapting. They now focus on “self-quarantine” and “flattening the curve,” Hopgood says. “We’re taking a focus on homemade sandwiches and using what you’ve got in the kitchen, being as creative as possible.”

Memphis Sandwich Clique now streams sandwich challenges, which feature Skahill as host.

It’s a “challenge video series,” says Skahill, who wants people to “support local businesses but still stay safe and stay in the house. We decided to still let people post their to-go order from spots that are open, but, as far as the content we’re creating, [we] focus more on a homemade sandwich challenge, where you can send a live or finished product.”

The challenge streams to several places. “I go live on my personal Facebook and then share it to the group and all these other groups. And people start watch parties,” Skahill says.

The posts are “like TV episodes,” he adds. “At any point in time during the day people are going live.”

As for the first challenge, Skahill says, “We’re doing hashtags. This one is called #cliquebreakfastwars. That’s the breakfast sandwich one we’re doing.

“You pick three people to do the challenge. I nominated my mom who is in North Carolina, and I nominated someone in Boston. It’s not just limited to Memphis anymore. It’s good to get inspiration from across the nation.”

The three people Skahill nominated challenged three more people. “It goes on as long as the chain goes on.”

He plans to introduce a new sandwich challenge weekly. “I’ll make a new hashtag this week. So we’ll have people nominating people for the breakfast challenge while another one is going. It’s like a round. It’s very fun.”

The series initially began with Hopgood making a breakfast sandwich at home. “Ryan is by no means a professional chef,” Skahill says. “So, I believe he sparked the movement.”

Describing his “breakfast bagel,” Hopgood says, “I didn’t really know what to use, so I just threw a bunch of stuff together … eggs, creamed cheese, bacon, salami, pepper jelly, and cheddar cheese.

“People were making fun of my eggs. I looked on Google how to cook scrambled eggs, and I watched Gordon Ramsay’s way, but I didn’t have the cream, so I used mayo.”

His breakfast bagel “kind of kicked off the challenge.”

Memphis Sandwich Clique administrator Stephen Hoffman tore Hopgood’s sandwich apart in his comments. “He basically one-upped me,” Hopgood says. “He went live the next day and made a breakfast sandwich. That’s how the whole thing started. It was really just the moderators challenging each other — just us checking each other — and it grew to adding more people to the challenge.”

“My submission, I think, is the best,” Skahill says. “It’s called The Tiny Breakfast Bomb, where I used an everything bagel and I put Tiny Bomb beer in my eggs and in the cooked turkey sausage. And I used Central BBQ rub on my eggs. Then avocado, cucumber, and tomato.”

Hopgood will be a semi-regular in the challenges. He doesn’t have a lot of groceries on hand at home, but he also spends time at his family’s home. “I’m going to pop up now and then,” he says. “My mom is still getting groceries.

“The main thing is we want people to keep the competitive edge going in their home kitchen, their cooking skills sharp even though they’re in quarantine. A lot of people in the groups are chefs around town, so you’ll see some great creations.”

Skahill believes the series will get bigger and bigger: “Everyone’s getting real creative now that they’re bored out of their minds.”

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We Recommend We Recommend

Pop-Up Shop and Memphis Sandwich Clique Meet Up this Sunday

Looking for unique, locally made holiday gifts for friends and family? Or perhaps just a delicious sandwich? The Planet’s Finest Gift Shop, a CBD dispensary and art dealer fusion store, provides a one-stop shop this Sunday with their Holidays Pop-Up Shop and Memphis Sandwich Clique Meet Up.

A number of vendors will set up shop in the neighboring parking lots, offering wares including original canvas artworks, candles, quirky crocheted hats, and crafts made by artist C. Young (the artist behind the University of Memphis Tiger sculptures seen around town) and 14 others.

Jason Payton

Pop-up shop features local art.

Guests will also be able to explore the shop’s museum-esque wall of visual art for sale and brand-new apparel room while checking out CBD products that are produced in-house.

Outside, the popular Facebook group Memphis Sandwich Clique, of which Jason Payton (co-founder of The Planet’s Finest) is a moderator, will be hosting a meet-up for their first battle of the buns. Bain Barbecue (barbecue sandwiches) and Walking the Dog (made-from-scratch hotdogs and sausages) will ask for customers’ votes to help Clique members settle a hot debate.

“Half of the moderators think hot dogs are sandwiches, and the other half think they aren’t,” says Payton. “So we’re going to let our guests decide by voting on the best sandwich.”

While shopping and deciding whether or not a hotdog is indeed a sandwich, attendees will have the opportunity to enjoy a smorgasbord of electronic music from local artists like Brian Hamilton, Tree Riehl, and GuTTA KicK.

“The big thing that I want to push is bringing people together to do their holiday shopping with local artists and makers while supporting local art, whether that’s visual, musical, or culinary,” says Payton.

Holidays Pop-Up Shop/Memphis Sandwich Clique Meet Up, The Planet’s Finest Gift Shop, Sunday, November 3rd, 1-5 p.m., free. First 50 guests will receive free CBD flower pre-rolled joints.

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News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Memphis Sandwich Clique, Festival Weekend

In the Clique

Photo posted to Memphis Sandwich Clique Facebook group by RachAel Mimbs

Locals only. No fast food. Hot dogs, wraps, and tacos are not sandwiches. These are but a few of the concrete rules for the Memphis Sandwich Clique, a public Facebook group.

The rest is as simple and delicious as you might expect. Get a (local) sandwich. Take a photo of it. Describe it. Post it to the group and “let the best sammy win.”

The group was founded in late July but boasted 8,833 members as of Monday. Those members help each other find the city’s dankest sandwiches (Phillies, Cubans, BLTs, reubens, clubs, burgers, and more). Sam’s Deli, Rawk’n Grub, Old Whitten Tavern, and Elwood’s Shack are easy favorites of the group.

A Classic Festival Weekend

Your weekend social feeds most certainly showed some of the action from the steamy-but-fun Southern Heritage Classic or Cooper-Young Festival. Something like this, eh?

Posted to Facebook by Tennessee State University