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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Mimi’s Meals

Something about his mother’s heavenly hamburger casserole made Richard McCracken and his wife Molly create Mimi’s Meals.

That and the lasagna, macaroni and cheese, and other casseroles made by his mom K.C. Bryant, who is known as “Mimi” to her grandkids.

“When we had our baby, my mom made us a lot of casseroles,” McCracken says. “And these are just like the ones I grew up on as a kid.

“My wife was like, ‘Oh, my God. These are the most amazing casseroles. Even when you put them in the freezer, take one out, thaw it, and cook it, they were still awesome. Get all her recipes and make these casseroles.’”

The McCrackens now sell the casseroles at their Memphis Kitchen Co-Op & Marketplace at 7946 Fischer Steel Road in Cordova.

They feature 14 different casseroles, including chicken macaroni and cheese. Million dollar chicken is a chicken and cheese dish. “And it’s really good and gooey.” Heavenly hamburger is “everybody’s favorite. It’s macaroni noodles with marinara sauce. Then it has ground beef, cream cheese. On top it has cheddar cheese.” Then there’s chicken chili spaghetti, which is “ground beef, onions, peppers, with a chili sauce, and chunks of chicken in it. And tossed with spaghetti noodles. It’s to die for.”

McCracken created some of his own casseroles, including the ooey gooey casserole, which is “like the million dollar chicken, but has penne pasta and broccoli in it.”

He also put his own twist on the heavenly hamburger recipe, and altered it to come up with a cheeseburger casserole. “I put sauce in it and make it moist and gooey and just kind of go from there.”

McCracken also created the tuna noodle casserole and salmon pasta casserole.

His mother has “tried every one,” McCracken says. “She loves them. They are Mimi approved.”

The casseroles, which include a caricature of his mother on the logo, are available online at eatamplified.com and at Memphis Kitchen Co-Op & Marketplace. “You can order them online and have them delivered to your house on Sunday. Or walk in the store and order them as well.”

His mother inspired him to become a cook, he says. “I grew up with three sisters and none of them were really that interested in the kitchen stuff. So, I would always help mom when I was 6 or 7.”

McCracken helped with the casseroles, too. He did “as much as you can let a 6- or 7-year-old kid do. I don’t know. I probably chopped some veggies for them or something.”

Bryant, who lives in Heber Springs, Arkansas, explains why she likes to make casseroles. “Because it’s a meal in one,” she says. “You’ve got your everything. When I grew up, you had meat, you had starch, you had a vegetable. And I found you could put them all in the casserole dish and kids would eat them. Especially if you had cheese in them.”

As for recipes, Bryant rotated “probably about a dozen [casseroles] that the kids would really like.

“I’ve always been an experimentalist, I guess you could say. I’d see a recipe and say, ‘Ooo. That sounds good. I can change this and we can make this so much better.’”

A friend, who co-owned a beauty shop with her, came up with the original heavenly hamburger recipe for a cookbook they decided to put together, Bryant says. They wanted to give discounts to anyone who brought in a recipe to “get more people to come in.”

Bryant, who thought heavenly hamburger was delicious, tweaked the recipe and made it her own. It’s now her go-to casserole. “My husband requests that once a week. I won’t make it for him once a week, but he requests it.”

Bryant, who works at an elderly community, still does a lot of cooking for others. “Someone has a baby, someone is sick, someone is coming home from the hospital, just if they need a little help — they had surgery or whatnot, I’ll bring them a casserole.”

And, of course, she loves to cook for her 16-month-old grandson Ryker McCracken. “He’s a little hoot toot.”

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Food & Drink Food Reviews

Can’t Stand the Heat? Get into Memphis Kitchen Co-Op

Richard McCracken is happy to say, “Amplified Meal Prep has a new home now.”

He and his wife Molly are the owners of their first brick-and-mortar business, Memphis Kitchen Co-Op, at 7946 Fischer Steel Road in Cordova.

The 6,500-square-foot building, which also houses their healthy food business, Amplified Meal Prep, has space for people like themselves, who don’t have room in their homes to make food in quantity.

“I just want to help people,” Richard says. “I wanted to open a community kitchen where people can rent from us. But I didn’t want to be like, ‘Here’s the key. You owe us $700 the first of the month. See you later.’ I want to be able to help people do what we did. We wanted to have a place where we can help you start a business from A to Z.”

Somebody might say, “I have an Aunt Sally, and she makes the most amazing peanut butter pie in the world.”

So, Aunt Sally decides to sell her pies, but she finds it’s $2,500 a month to rent a kitchen. Then she needs an oven and a kitchen mixer. That’s $12,000. She also needs other kitchenware, which could be another thousand. She says, “Oh, my God. I just can’t do it.”

“That’s where we come in,” Richard says. “We offer any equipment you need. I’ll buy it for your use. You come in. Pay us rent.”

Their commercial equipment includes eight convection ovens, eight standard ovens, four 10-burner stoves, two flat-top grills, a 30-quart and 60-quart mixer, food processors, a 24-by-14-foot walk-in cooler, a 32-by-7-foot walk-in display cooler, 50 prep tables, 120 storage shelves, and 40 feet of vent hood space.

The McCrackens “will sit down with you if you have any concerns — how to price food, food costs, where to go for your business license, Department of Agriculture certified aspect of agriculture. We help you with all that.”

They also provide help getting the word out online. “We have an in-house marketing group, Ruby Red Media, that does individual or group social media [and] handles email and stuff like that.”

Memphis Kitchen Co-Op rent is based on time, space, and need, but it’s less than most commercial kitchens, Richard says.

Unlike other commercial kitchens, they will include a store. “We’re going to sell all our tenants’ products in there. People can walk in and buy 30 or 40 different companies’ products.” They also will have a website, where people can order Memphis Kitchen Co-Op products. “We deliver or you come to the store and we have it ready for you in a box.”

Renters can range from bakers and food truck owners to people who prepare school lunch programs. “Anybody who wants to start up a new business, we’ll help them get going.”

Richard also plans to till a 14-by-120-foot patch of grass next to the building for a community garden.

Richard, who wrestled for 20 years, and Molly opened Amplified Meal Prep three years ago. Customers can order healthy comfort food or build custom meals according to their specific diet plan.

They were “camped out” in another commercial kitchen, but, Richard says, “We ran out of room.” The couple couldn’t operate out of that space anymore. “So I started looking in November of last year for a commercial building. All of a sudden this popped up.” Molly originally thought the building was too big, but Richard told her, “We’ll grow into it.”

Memphis Kitchen Co-Op is “a testament of hard work. And I really want to get our message out there that people like me and Molly, who worked our full-time jobs for two years and Amplified two years — that’s what you have to do. Now look at us. We have, essentially, a million-dollar building for four years. It’s centrally located, smack dab in the middle of everything. It’s 15 minutes from Downtown, 15 minutes from out east, and 15 minutes from Germantown.”

For information on Memphis Kitchen Co-Op, go to memphiskitchenco-op.com.