Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Muddy’s Bake Shop, Grind House Consolidating

Bianca noticed that the sign at Muddy’s Grind House had changed … 

What happened to the Grind House???

From operations manager Kip Gordon:

“Yep, the Grind House is gone on the sign out front, but not from our hearts! After getting a lot of feedback from customers both in Midtown and East Memphis, we decided to bring the two stores back together a bit. The Bake Shop products will be more available in Midtown and the Midtown products available in East Memphis. Grind House will now refer more specifically to the coffee bar section in Midtown. The product exchange isn’t happening all at once, we’re kind of doing it in waves as we figure out logistics and transferral, but it’s already started!

We’re super excited about the change and really feel it’s the path to serving our customers as best we can. I mean, ginger scones in East Memphis? What’s not awesome about that?” 

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Guess Where I’m Eating Contest: Win Tickets to Margarita Festival!

Terrific prize for this week’s contest: a pair of passes to the Memphis Flyer Margarita Festival, Saturday, June 27th, 3-6 p.m. at the Overton Park Greensward. 

A ticket gets you 15 margarita samples from area restaurants. You can also vote for best margarita; competitors are Molly’s, Happy Mexican, Agave Maria, Tin Roof, Swanky’s, Slider Inn, Blind Bear, Blue Monkey, Rockhouse Live, Rafferty’s, Babalu, 3 Angels, and Young Avenue Deli. 

The first person to correctly ID the dish and where I’m eating wins the tickets. To enter, submit your answer to me via email at ellis@memphisflyer.com

The answer to GWIE 68 is the ginger scone from Muddy’s Grind House, and the winner is … Jarrod Taylor!

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

The things we ate in 2014.

Last winter, Holly Whitfield of the I Love Memphis Blog announced that Memphis is in the midst of a spectacular “Foodnado.” How apt! My cursory count of restaurants, breweries, and sundry food-related places that opened in 2014 adds up to 40, and not all of them in Overton Square.

But, then again, a lot of them are in Overton Square. Babalu Tacos & Tapas opened in June, offering tableside-prepared guacamole and lots of sharing plates. The place has been packed since. In August came Jimmy Ishii’s Robata Ramen & Yakitori Bar with a fine menu of ramen noodle bowls and skewers. Lafayette’s Music Room, an homage to the original much-loved, circa-’70s Overton Square bar named for the recently passed away ace bartender Lafayette Draper, opened in September and features wood-fired pizzas and a music schedule set at palatable hours. Schweinehaus, a cheeky Memphis take on German food, also opened in September. There’s beer, brats, and the occasional lederhosen sighting — what’s not to like? If you need olive oil, there’s the Square Olive, and there’s more music and fun at the Chicago-based Zebra Lounge.

Justin Fox Burks

Robata Ramen & Yakitori Bar

The most recent addition to Overton Square is Belly Acres, a farm-to-table burger restaurant, the latest of three burger-centric places to open in Memphis. This trend has our full endorsement. Belly Acres has a fantasyland interior and a menu that demands to be gone through one burger at a time. Down the street, there’s LBOE (Last Burger on Earth). Its menu raises the bar with such burgers as the super spicy Lava Me or Lava Me Not and the garlic-laden Love Stinks. Oshi Burger Bar downtown has something for everyone — beef burgers, tuna burgers, vegetarian burgers, gluten-free buns. They also have great milkshakes.

Justin Fox Burks

Oshi Burger Bar on South Main

Plenty of glasses have been raised at the taprooms opened in 2014 at High Cotton Brewing Co. and Memphis Made Brewing Co., and Memphis promises to get buzzier still in the new year with Pyramid Vodka. Wine in grocery stores finally passed, and while that doesn’t happen until 2016, local liquor stores are making the best of it with growler stations and more.

In grocery-store news: Whole Foods opened its expanded store in East Memphis, which includes a site-specific barbecue restaurant and a growler station. There’s the new Fresh Market in Midtown, and Kroger continues to show its commitment to Memphis in updating its stores, most recently the one at Cleveland and Poplar. Plus, there’s been some buzz about a Trader Joe’s opening sometime somewhere. We shall see.

In coffee news: Everybody freaked out when Muddy’s Bake Shop announced a new Midtown store in August 2013. Muddy’s Grind House opened this fall and offers a little of everything, from coffee to breakfast eats and yoga. The Avenue, near the University of Memphis, has great coffee and treats with Christian fellowship. There’s also Cafe Keough downtown in a gorgeous setting with a great cafe Americano. Tart offers quiches and more — a great go-to place when expectations are high. Ugly Mug took over the Poplar Perk’n space, and Jimmy Lewis, who founded Squash Blossom, returned to the scene with Relevant Roasters, selling wholesale, environmentally sound, and worker-friendly coffee with the motto “Every Cup Matters.”

After a few false starts, the Riverfront Development Corporation came through with Riverfront Grill. It serves a sophisticated but not too syrupy Southern menu and also has some of the best views in Memphis. Also new this year to downtown are the Kwik Chek spinoff Nacho’s, Marie’s Eatery in the old Rizzo’s Diner spot, and Cafe Pontotoc. Rizzo’s moved into the old Cafe Soul site, and there’s the Love Pop Soda Shop, a nifty craft soda shop.

In East Memphis, Skewer, serving Yakitori and ramen, opened in January. 4 Dumplings opened around the same time, and, as its name suggests, the menu is built around four dumplings. The vegan dumpling with tofu is not to be missed.

Since at least four people mentioned to me that Jackson Kramer’s Bounty on Broad is “secretly” gluten-free, I’m guessing it’s not really a secret. The dishes at this lovely farm-to-table spot are thoughtfully done and a delight to look at. The menu changes frequently, but at a recent dinner, there were mussels in fragrant coconut milk, charred broccolini, and creamed kale served over polenta. Also gluten-free is the Hawaiian import Maui Brick Oven, serving brick-oven pizzas and grain bowls.

Justin Fox Burks

Bounty on Broad’s Jackson Kramer

At Ecco on Overton Park, Sabine Bachmann’s cozy neighborhood restaurant, there are heaping dishes of pork chops, delicate pasta dishes, and artful cheese plates — something for every appetite. Strano Sicilian Kitchen & Bar serves a great roasted carrot soup and Italian classics from meatballs to pizza.

At press time, Porcellino’s, Andrew Ticer and Michael Hudman’s latest venture, was due to open “any minute now.” File this one under “This Should Be Interesting.” This is a butcher shop/sundry/coffee spot/wine bar offering grab-and-go sandwiches, fresh pastas, cured meats, house-made pastries, and more.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Muddy’s Grind House Now Open

20141003_123057.jpg

Muddy’s Bake Shop is best known for its cupcakes, but a new foray into the world of coffee at the recently opened Muddy’s Grind House may prove to be the perfect accompaniment to their lineup of goodies.

The name itself is oh-so-Memphis, and the coffee shop itself is located in a Cooper Street house on a hill. The coffee shop’s interior is modern and clean with neutrals, but adding the classic Muddy’s flair: chalkboards, pastels, and pops of color. It’s the bakery’s sibling, not a twin; if the Bake Shop is the kooky, free-spirited sister, the Grind House is the intellectual, sophisticated one.

Kat Gordon, who opened Muddy’s Bake Shop in 2008, said they’re approaching coffee the same way they did cupcakes: with a learning curve.

“We made the decision to grow the business as long as it was a different business, rather than just replicating,” says Gordon. “Once that decision was made, I think it was kind of obvious. We got real excited about the idea of doing coffee.”

[jump]

“We want to represent different local roasters,” Grind House manager Nicci Bucherie-Kearl says. “We’ll do pour-overs eventually. We’re all learning right now, so it’s really exciting to start with zero knowledge, and not just learn with the staff but with the customer base as well.”

20141003_123323.jpg

A chalkboard near the patio asks for ideas: “What would you like added to the menu?” Customers’ responses on one visit suggested green tea, cinnamon toast, and sandwiches. One ambitious visitor asked for bulletproof coffee.

The drinks menu is small by design, with new items to added over time. Currently, it features brewed drip coffee, french press, cafe au lait, espresso, latte, cappuccino, and tea.

Grind House offers muffins, biscuits, slices of coffee cake, and scones, including ginger scones made from Gordon’s father’s recipe. There are cupcakes, slices of pie and cakes, cookies, and more from the Bake Shop as well.

A room attached to the main area, perhaps a parlor in another life, may soon house community events like book clubs, similar to the community-oriented environment at the Muddy’s Bake Shop in East Memphis. There’s also a patio with additional seating in the back.

“We want to be a part of the coffee culture here,” Gordon says. “There are so many places in town that do know so much, which is absolutely incredible. We really are coming to this with a very open slate, so instead of us telling people, ‘This is what we think you should be enjoying,’ we’re going to be a place that if this type of environment is interesting to someone, they can come in and learn with us. We want it to be very accessible. Nobody is going to roll their eyes at you if you say ‘expresso’ instead of ‘espresso.’”