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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Five-Course Thursdays

Here’s a way to jazz up your Thursday nights: Amelia Gene’s is offering a five-course tasting menu — for only $50 per person.

It’s the brainchild of Nate Henssler, executive chef at the restaurant at 255 South Front Street.

“I’ve been kind of tinkering with the idea for a couple of months,” Henssler says. “Guests come in and have a five-course dining experience. You can move as quickly or slowly as you want.”

For an additional $30, they’re served wine that pairs with each course.

The vegetarian tasting was designed to be something special. “I don’t want to have it on the menu five nights a week. It’s not that kind of a restaurant.”

And, he says, “Portions are small. I could share more and try to make more money, but I want to get people in the restaurant and get this ritual of going out on Thursdays.”

His tasting menu evolved. “People always ask, ‘Are you going to do a tasting menu?’ Most people don’t want that. But recreational diners, so to speak, ask that all the time.”

When people select the tasting menu, they’re saying, “I’m going to put myself in the chef’s hands.”

Henssler is going to use themes for each tasting menu. “Cheese” is the current theme. “I thought it would be fun to do a menu based on the cheeses we serve on the cart.”

He only serves domestic cheese on the cart. “I want to showcase American creameries, American dairies.”

An eclair with shallot jam and honey from Hive Bagel & Deli is the first course, or “proper bite.” “Just a small eclair. Instead of pastry cream or Bavarian, we take on a cheese called ‘Shabby Shoe.’”

The cheese, made by Blakesville Creamery in Port Washington, Wisconsin, is based on the French cheese chabichou du Poitou. “This is a goat cheese and the flavor is light and citrusy.”

He mixes the mild cheese with a little salt, pepper, and mascarpone and “puts it in an eclair with dark caramelized shallots. And we drizzle it with honey we get from Hive across the street.”

For the salad, Henssler uses milkweed cheese from Tulip Tree Creamery in Indianapolis, Indiana. “That’s cow’s milk. And that one is different. It has a flavor of hay. Slightly like a mild mushroom flavor.”

It’s a “straightforward dish.” “We just take tomatoes and season them with sea salt and black pepper and let the juices come out. All with different herbs — tarragon, mint, chervil, thyme, basil, dill. We get milk bread and slice it up and sauté it in a hot pan with a little olive oil, salt, and pepper.”

He adds thinly-sliced tomatoes and lets everything slightly cool. “And finish it with the cheese and pine cone bud syrup.”

For the tempura zucchini blossom with ratatouille and lemon aioli, Henssler uses a hand-dipped ricotta. “This is sort of a dish that is something like I did back when I was working in San Francisco. My chef used to fill squash blossoms with crab meat or risotto and fry them.” Henssler fills the squash blossom with ricotta and a little bit of salt and pepper. He dips it in tempura and serves it on diced ratatouille flavored with rosemary and pink peppercorn-infused oil with house oven-dried tomato and lemon aioli.

“That ricotta tastes like really good milk. Almost grassy.”

Henssler uses a sheep’s milk cheese called piedras in his Arborio risotto with basil emulsion and sugar snap peas entree. Blakesville Creamery “only made about 15 of these and I have two of them.”

The cheese has “some earthiness. It has a dry rind, so it has a dusty flavor to it.”

To make the basil emulsion, Henssler purees basil, green garlic, lemon zest, and cultured butter. “You puree that together and get this really bright green bright finish on the risotto. It tastes very fresh and has that bright green color.”

The dessert course is “Blue Cheesecake” made with poached Bosc pears, frisée, and port wine. Bosc is a brown pear that’s firmer than other pears. Henssler poached the pears in port wine last fall. They’ve “been sitting in port wine for five months now.”

Along with the frisée, a type of lettuce, Henssler uses bleu cheese from Moo & Blue Firefly Farms in Indian Mound, Tennessee. “This is more of a soft, sweet, tangy bleu cheese. Not super stinky.”

The port wine reduction and pear adds a sweetness to the bleu cheese in the dessert, which is “more like a quiche.”

Henssler is already thinking about future Thursday night tastings. “Into fall I might want to do some different types of game meat — wild rabbit, wild boar, venison. That type of thing. Maybe you could do five different courses incorporating different shellfish. Or when the cod is in season.”

A five-course menu is “a lot of fun. And that’s why the staff really likes it. It gives us a chance to be creative for a little bit.”

The staff gets to “learn and taste different foods and sell different foods.”

And “guests also get something different.”

Speaking of guests, Henssler recently got a call from his boss asking, “Can you take a party of 20 in an hour and a half?”

The group, which arrived at Amelia Gene’s about 9:15 p.m., included Elon Musk, who ordered a steak and salad, Henssler says. “I’ve been told he had a really good dinner. And that the level of civility, hospitality, the sophistication of the restaurant, and how we were able to accommodate them quickly made him feel it was the right decision to come to Memphis.

“Indirectly, we can take credit for xAI coming to Memphis,” Henssler jokes.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Amelia Gene’s Nate Henssler

Nate Henssler describes his duck selection on Amelia Gene’s menu as “a tribute to one of my heroes — Julia Child.”

Henssler, who is executive chef at Amelia Gene’s restaurant adjacent to the Caption by Hyatt Beale Street Memphis Hotel at 255 South Front Street, grew up in New Hampshire watching the legendary chef ’s TV show. “I was watching Julia Child, The French Chef, maybe because my parents watched it a little bit. I thought her voice was funny. And she just seemed like a grandmother type.”

And, he says, “She was always very curious. And you could feel the love — or see it —when she cooked. It was very approachable.”

Henssler, who describes Amelia Gene’s as “a modern American chef-driven restaurant,” says, “Duck is something we’re having on the menu probably all the time.”

His crispy duck dish, which he calls “a play on duck à l’orange,” takes five days to produce. “The legs we cure in a salt and sugar mix with soy spices. And we cure that for a day, cooking it in its own fat. Confit. It’s a technique. This dish is not something I made up. I like these techniques, and it makes the duck taste really good.”

The dish includes butter, garlic, shallots, and Belgian endive. “It’s served with the same sauce we make from the duck bones with orange purée and kumquats preserved in honey.”

Rather than do a seasonal menu change, Henssler plans to just scale back the menu. “It’s hard on the staff to do a seasonal menu change.”

In addition to the duck, Henssler says his blackberry oysters with cauliflower soubise, pickled cucumber, and bay leaf will remain on the menu. “It’s based on an oyster I ate when my wife and I were in London over Christmas. A tweak on that.”

His charred octopus salad with mustard greens and salted lemon dressing is another one. “The octopus is a super simple dish. I cook it really slowly. The octopus takes about eight hours. It’s slowly braised in white wine.”

He uses the bones from the black bass on the menu to make a fish stock. “Reduce that down. And we purée salted lemon and lemon oil in that. It comes out like a warm mayonnaise.”

As a child, both Henssler’s parents worked. His mother was a “day-to-day cook. A lot of casseroles. Early ’80s American food. Crock pot food. A lot of leftovers. It seemed like we had leftovers every night, actually.”

His dad, who was known for his spaghetti, would cook the sauce all day.

But, Henssler says, “My parents didn’t use a lot of salt or pepper when they cooked.”

He recalled tasting food at his first restaurant job and “realizing how alive everything tasted with just a pinch of salt.”

Henssler’s first “paying job” was working as a baker’s assistant. The bakery owner knew he was interested in food, so she let him “do some prep work in the bakery. Forming dough.”

He then got a job as garde manger at the Bedford Village Inn. His boss, chef Christopher Ward, noticed Henssler’s interest in cooking. “He pushed me to get off that station and move up to the next station.”

When he was 18, Henssler enrolled at the New England Culinary Institute, where he got to work with the school’s founder, Michel LeBorgne. “Some of the chefs at the culinary school seemed like such badasses. The men and women teaching us. We idolized them.”

Henssler, who has worked at top restaurants in Las Vegas and Chicago, moved to Memphis a year ago. He’s also a managing partner in the Carlisle Restaurant Group. “I think Memphis diners are ready to sort of experience what diners in Chicago or New York are experiencing. We need a restaurant that could compete in any city.”

Describing his “contemporary American chef-driven” cuisine, Henssler says, “This is what I feel like cooking. If something is in season and the purveyor has this for the next two months, we’ll come up with a really good dish. And do as little to those ingredients as we can so we can showcase that ingredient.”