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News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Laura’s Lightning, No More Noodles, and Pancho’s Search

Laura’s Lightning

Amazing images of Hurricane Laura in Memphis were posted last week.

Posted to Reddit by u/tacojohn48

Posted to Instagram by Choose 901

Lucky Cat

In an Instagram post, Lucky Cat Ramen announced it would close.

“No more noodles for awhile,” Lucky Cat said in the post. “This pandemic has been brutal and it looks like we’re another casualty. We [love] you so much and hope to be back soon. #loveyou.”

Pancho Search

Pancho’s Cheese Dip created auto-filled search results in an Instagram post last week.

The search for “Pancho’s” yielded results like “Pancho’s where buy at 1 a.m.,” and the best one, “Pancho’s baby name legal?”

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Say Hola to the New Pancho’s Man

Toby Sells

The new Pancho Man mingles with the old Pancho Man on the shelves at Midtown Kroger.

Pancho’s quietly rolled out its new Pancho Man recently, a decidedly less cartoon-y version of the Pancho Man who has been the face of the beloved cheese dip since 1956.

Pancho’s announced a change to the logo last month with a cryptic tweet, reading “get ready to meet the new Pancho.” An image of the new logo accompanied the tweet with only a silhouette where the new Pancho would reside.

Toby Sells

The new Pancho’s man.

The old Pancho is a smiling, mustachioed, and sombrero-ed cartoon. The new Pancho is a smiling, mustachioed, and sombrero-ed cartoon, too. Or, maybe you could call him a drawing? But he’s decidedly less cartoon-y than the old Pancho, whose years of service on the lid of the city’s favorite cheese dip made him an easily recognizable Memphis icon.

Toby Sells

Ben Fant, principal and creative director at the Farmhouse marketing firm, has stayed fresh on the Pancho-Man beat. I’ll give him a huge, digital hat tip here for finding the new Pancho in the wild first (to my knowledge) and posting him to Facebook (which is where I saw it first).

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As of Friday morning, neither Pancho’s Cheese Dips nor Pancho’s restaurant had formally introduced the new Pancho online. But the company has been clear on any reference to the new Pancho — the cheese dip recipe will remain unchanged.

Last month, Rafael Rangel asked Pancho’s on Twitter why the company wanted to change the logo. “Why mess with something so perfect?” he asked.

“We just want to make sure our logo looks as great as the dip tastes!” the company responded. “New look, but always same taste!”

Toby Sells

There’s a new logo in town, amigo.

Categories
Cover Feature News

Say Cheese! Memphis’ Love Affair With Pancho’s — and Cheese Dip.

“Pancho Man” is the guy with the big mustache and sombrero on the cartons of Pancho’s cheese dip. Tim Wallace, who also sports a mustache, is the other Pancho Man. He’s president of Pancho’s manufacturing plant and the man who keeps the Pancho’s South Memphis cheese-dip operation running smoothly.

You might say Wallace lives and breathes Pancho’s. “I can’t go into a grocery store without turning the face of the Pancho Man out,” he says. “I run the day-to-day operations of the whole company,” Wallace said. “I’m the salesman. I’m the whole nine yards. You might say,” he grins, “that I’m the big cheese.”

Wallace began working for Pancho’s in 1988, and was responsible for introducing the brand’s white cheese dip and the chipotle cheese dip. He also scaled down the plant and helped create new machinery to make more dip — and make it faster.

Wallace also created the cheese dip’s  “Best Dip on the Planet” slogan. “We actually have that trademarked. We were ‘liquid gold’ before Velveeta took it. We just never trademarked it.”

Tim Wallace

Clemmie and Morris Berger, both deceased, opened the first Pancho’s Mexican restaurant in 1956 in West Memphis. They also owned the legendary Plantation Inn club, also in West Memphis. The current West Memphis Pancho’s stands on the site of the Plantation Inn.

Wallace says the company’s origin story is a simple one: “The family took a trip to Mexico, and when they came back, they said, ‘We’re going to open a Mexican restaurant.'”

Brenda O’Brien, Morris Berger’s daughter, says her father was also the creator of “Pancho Man.” O’Brien says she was with him when he made the first drawing. “Daddy wanted to get a mascot for the restaurant. Daddy could draw really well.”

Early on, Pancho’s featured cheese dip with their chips on the menu. “Cheese dip is not a Mexican dish,” Wallace says. “If you Google it, you’re going to see some historians say it started in 1935 in Hot Springs, Arkansas. And then you’re going to find just as many historians who say, ‘No, it started in 1956 at Pancho’s in West Memphis.'” Wallace says. Della Gonzales, whom the Bergers brought back with them from Mexico, was the cook who came up with the cheese dip.

Over the years, Pancho’s restaurant franchises kept expanding over the Mid-South, and all of them served the cheese dip. Now, only two Pancho’s restaurants remain: one in West Memphis and one on Summer Avenue at White Station in Memphis.

Julia Eason and containers stamped with “Pancho Man.”

Pancho’s began manufacturing its cheese dip in the late 1970s, Wallace says, adding that it used to come in a “little cardboard container.”

These days, the dip, now packaged in plastic containers, is big business. “We’ve increased our business 20 percent each year for the last five years,” Wallace says. “We’re in 18 states now. We just went into Michigan. All of Michigan’s Sam’s Clubs. Fifteen years ago, a guy told me that we would never go past Forrest City, Arkansas. I just laughed. We’re in every Walmart, every grocery store in the state of Arkansas. We’re in Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Georgia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Louisiana, Mississippi, part of Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, West Virginia.”

Wallace isn’t planning on stopping at 15 states. “We want to be all over the place. And you know what we’re going to do? We’re going to do it right here in Memphis.”

The Memphis plant still makes taco meat, beans, rice, and gravy for the two restaurants, but four days a week, it concentrates on one product — cheese dip. “We’re a family-run business. We’re a small business. And we’re trying to keep it simple,” Wallace says. “We’re just trying to concentrate on what we do best.”

So what makes Pancho’s Cheese Dip so good? Wallace is glad you asked. “What makes our cheese dip so superior is that we just put cheese in it. We don’t do fillers and additives and junk. I have people call me all the time: ‘Hey, I got this additive that you can put in your cheese dip and you can add more water.'”

None of that for Wallace. No thickening agents, either. “We use a high-quality cheese. It’s ‘extra melt American process.’ And I promise you, as long as I’m breathing air, we’ll never change our recipe.”

And that recipe, as you might guess, is a trade secret.

“If you pulled up ‘Pancho’s’ on the Internet,” Wallace says, “you’ll see hundreds of people, thousands of people, say, ‘I’ve got the recipe.’ Trust me. They do not have the recipe. They can get it close, but they’re always leaving out a couple of key ingredients.”

Is there a secret ingredient? “Yes. There’s a secret ingredient.”

And, as you also might guess, it’s going to remain a secret.

Seventeen years ago, Wallace came up with the white cheese dip. “It’s just a white cheese versus a yellow cheese. It doesn’t taste the same because it doesn’t have tomatoes in it. I make it a little bit thicker.”

Pancho’s came out with a chipotle cheese dip a year and a half ago. “It’s got just a little bit of a smoky flavor to it,” says Wallace. “And it has that kick that says, ‘Mmmm. Wait a minute. This is a little spicy.'”

Pancho’s goes through a truckload of cheese every week, Wallace says. “An 18 wheeler.”

Each week, 70,000 to 100,000 cups of dip are made — in 8-, 16-, and 32-ounce cups.

You might think this would take a massive factory with hundreds of employees, but you’d be wrong. “I’ve got 10 employees back there,” Wallace says.

The company originally used five-pound blocks of cheese, which came six to a box. People had to take the blocks out of the box and other people had to grind it.  “I was thinking, ‘Why don’t we just get a 40-pound block — one block — open the box, cut it, grind it?”

A supplier developed a 45-pound block of cheese for Wallace. “It simplified the process, and it made the quality of the cheese better because it was bigger volume. The consistency didn’t do anything but improve.”

Wallace came up with other time-savers. “I started looking at a cheese-grinding machine, so we didn’t have to grind it by hand. So, I got some big old machines over here that I stuff with 45-pound blocks. It grinds it in five seconds. We were probably doing 3,000 tubs a day before. We’re doing 16,000 to 17,000 tubs a day now.

“All of our food is cooked in these pressurized kettles,” Wallace says, pointing to a batch of white cheese dip. “We’ve got two steam agitators in there to mix and to process it. It’s a steam jacketed kettle. It’s a unique design.”

Spices are added after the cheese melts. “When the blue lights comes on, that’s letting them know that the cheese is ready.”

The cheese then goes to a holding pot before it goes into a “heat exchange” machine that Wallace and Howard Jones, who works at the plant, created. The heat exchange cools the dip before it goes into the refill machine, so it won’t splatter around the rim of the carton after the dip is poured into the containers.

“I have a new machine coming mid-March that’ll do two cups at a time,” Wallace says. “Two lanes!”

Kelly Robinson, a native Memphian who moved to Portland in 2016, is a die-hard Pancho’s cheese dip fan. Whenever he visits his home town, he packs dip in his carry-on when he flies back to Portland. “I don’t leave Tennessee without it,” he says. “I usually take two or three. They freeze, so they can keep for a while.”

A caterer, Robinson said he likes the dip because it’s “a cold cheese dip.” And, he says, “I’ve eaten it my entire life. It reminds me of my childhood.”

And it’s true, Memphians love Pancho’s. Wallace likes to tell about the time the Food Channel did a story on their cheese dip. The producer and her team went to a Kroger store in Germantown to film. “The manager came in, and they said, ‘What does Pancho’s mean to Kroger?'” Wallace says. “He said, ‘Are you kidding me? It’s right behind milk.'” — Michael Donahue

The Flyer staff ranks six local dips.

Somehow, someway cheese dip has come to work its way into Memphians’ imaginations with an almost barbecue-like intensity. Specifically, Pancho’s Cheese Dip. A Twitter search reveals folks eating Pancho’s for breakfast, fantasies involving a Pancho’s bath, declarations of devotion wide and deep. Hi-Tone had a Pancho’s fountain for New Year’s Eve.

Arkansas lays claim as the birthplace of cheese dip (not to be mistaken for queso). As the story goes, it was invented by an Irish man in the 1930s. Nowadays, there’s the World Cheese Dip Championship held each fall at the Clinton library in Little Rock. Interestingly enough, Pancho’s also swears they invented cheese dip. (See accompanying story.)

Is Pancho’s all that? We decided to see for ourselves. We dug deep on this one, ranking six local cheese dips: Pancho’s Original Cheese Dip; Pancho’s White Cheese Dip; Tom’s Tiny Kitchen Chipotle Bacon; Tom’s Tiny Kitchen No So Spicy Thai; Tom’s Tiny Kitchen Classic White; and El Terrifico Tamale Co. White Cheese Dip. We judged the dips on taste/flavor, texture/consistency, aroma/color and appearance, and spice/seasoning. Service journalism at its finest, y’all. Ranked from favorite to least favorite:

1. Pancho’s Original

No surprise here. Like a newborn can crawl up its mother’s belly for the nipple, our crew instinctively recognized this classic much-loved dip. “I know this dip. My heart knows this dip,” wrote one of our raters. “I think this is Pancho’s, so it’s the best,” said another.

More: “Yeller/orange, almost a clockwork orange.” “Perfect. Cheesy.” “Ideal.” “Straight-ahead what you’d expect from a good-ass Memphis cheese dip.”

2. Tom’s Tiny Kitchen Classic White

A new contender to the dip wars, Tom’s Tiny Kitchen introduced three dips to the market last spring: Classic White, No So Spicy Thai, and Chipotle Bacon.

Classic White ranked second in our tasting, with its seasoning getting the most praise. “Actually tastes like something,” said one ranker. “Yum!,” went another. “Best to me,” noted one of our crew.

3. Tom’s Tiny Kitchen Chipotle Bacon

Most notable for its bacon flavor. “Spicy, smoky, like country ham. For a country boy, country ham = f*ckin’ good,” enthused a ranker. Another wrote the dip’s prominent bacon flavor was a game-changer. “Odd at first, but tasty!” and “Gets on my chip nicely,” said another. More: “Robust and tasty — best of the bunch.”

4. Tom’s Tiny Kitchen Not So Spicy Thai

Close on the heels of the number-three Chipotle Bacon, the Not So Spicy Thai got points for its texture and palate-pleasing spiciness. “Not too thick, not too thin,” commented one ranker. “Like the hot seasoning,” said another. One said the spice level was “right on.” One said it was “model thin” but with a “nice tang.”

5. El Terrifico Tamale Co. White Cheese Dip

This dip is used on Corky’s barbecue nachos. It’s a beast, with a viscous consistency like cake batter.

One wrote, “Total chip breaker.” Though most noted the thickness, many didn’t mind it.

6. Pancho’s White Cheese Dip

Surprising last-place finish for this name brand (though voting was close). The issue was consistency and flavor, though the damning among all these dips amounted to faint praise. One summed it up, “I like a thick dip, but not with this flavor.”

Categories
Letters To The Editor Opinion

What They Said…

Greg Cravens

About Randy Haspel’s column, “Give ‘Em Hill” …

I hate people who make Hillary look good. It’s a conspiracy wrapped in a plot inside a fraud.

CL Mullins

Oh look, Hillary won a Kewpie doll. Oh wait, that’s Trey Gowdy. Make it a Kreepie doll.

Jeff

Actually he’s the kid holding the banjo in Deliverance … all growed up.

Packrat

“Dueling Banjos” is his “Eye of the Tiger.”

Jeff

About Toby Sells’ post, “City Engineer Steps Down in First Post-Election Departure” …

He was also the point man who had to rationalize the dangerously designed and indefensible bike lanes on Riverside and was roundly shouted down by residents at the public meetings.

The idea for placing more parking meters downtown was boneheaded, discouraging Memphians from coming downtown. I am glad to see Mr. Cameron leave, and I just hope the next departure will be Mr. Rogers from Memphis Animal Services.

Memphis Tigers

My dad and I rode the Riverside bike lanes almost every weekend. Nobody says a word when they shut down Riverside for a couple months every year, but squeeze out lanes for bicycles, and everyone goes insane.

FUNKbrs

Wow! Absolutely right! Taking over 10,000 motorists a DAY and halving their traffic lanes (and doubling the accident rate) is a small price to pay so Scooter and his dad can ride those bike lanes almost 50 times a year. After all, two to three dozen cyclists a day used those bike lanes! Those selfish motorists! Equally hard to understand is the selfish public expecting to park on a public street! The nerve!

Hopefully, the new mayor will end the tyranny of PC and/or connected, tiny-but-vocal special-interest groups before all the traffic flows and parking in Midtown and downtown is ruined.

ALJ2

To all the folks vilifying the evil PC bike lanes: Just keep in mind that unless you’re able to differentiate yourself as a neighborhood, then you have little to offer. If our product (that is Midtown and downtown) looks and feels exactly like Cordova, then we have nothing meaningful to offer, and convincing people to infill and redevelop becomes an impossible task.

If you allow street life to develop and have your auto commute lengthened by 180 seconds, we can start to differentiate our product in a profound way. If we hold fast to a car-centric vision, then we’re exactly like all the other second-tier Sun Belt cities. Remake the whole of Midtown and downtown in the spirit of Harbor Town and watch what happens.

Apok

If Toney Armstrong’s department would enforce the law on Riverside, those bicycle lanes would still be there. Daily commuters should not use that road as their route.

Clyde

When Exxon/ISIS kicks the price of gas up to $10 a gallon you’ll all be scrambling for your Schwinns.

Nick R

About Bruce VanWyngarden’s “Bacon, Cheese Dip, and Rocket Scientists” …

Ah, the crappy commentary from The Memphis Flyer. Show some more political bias!

Chris Hopper

Perfect, Bruce! Hillary, too, brought home the bacon in the BS “Bengotcha” hearings.

CD

What’s the difference between this editorial and 50,000 plastic cups that say “Pancho’s Cheese Dip?”

Ichabod McCrane

About our elderly …

Isn’t it ironic that conservatives will whine and complain over giving a single mother $200 to feed her hungry kids or provide medical care for our elderly but not bat an eye over wasting $5,000,000 on investigations to hurt Hillary’s presidential bid?

Jim Brasfield

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

Bacon, Cheese Dip, and Rocket Scientists

A couple weeks ago, I was sitting at the bar in my neighborhood bistro eating a Lyonnaise salad. They use Benton’s smoked bacon in their salad, and it’s delicious. I raved about it to the bartender, and the restaurant owner, who happened to be sitting nearby, overheard me. He told me I could order it online.

I’d had just enough wine to decide that ordering some bacon sounded like something I needed to do. I Googled Benton smoked bacon, found the website, and began trying to order it on my phone. After a couple false starts, I managed to type in my address, phone number, and credit card number. It took a while, I admit, but it was dark in there. I ordered a couple of pounds, or so I thought. Three days later, 12 pounds of bacon showed up in a savory smelling box on my front porch. Oops.

When I went back to the restaurant a week or so later, a cook came out and gave me a five-pound bag of bacon. She said it was from Glen, the owner, because he was pretty sure I’d never gotten through to Benton Farms on my phone that night.

Wrongo, mon ami! Thanks to his generous gesture, I’d pretty much cornered the local market on Benton Smoked Bacon.

A couple days later, the Internet was filled with news of a World Health Organization story that eating bacon and other processed meats increases the risk of cancer. So I got that goin’ for me.

But at least I didn’t steal 50,000 empty Pancho’s Cheese Dip containers, like that schmo over in West Memphis. It’s hard to imagine a more stupid thing to steal. What was he going to do with 50,000 empty plastic cups that say “Pancho’s Cheese Dip”? Sell them in the want ads? How does that work?

For Sale: 50,000 empty Pancho’s dip cups, valued at $70,000. Will take $6.00, OBO.

Less than 24 hours after stealing the cups, the thief returned the booty, claiming it was a “mistake.” No kidding.

And at least I didn’t decide that slow-talkin’ brain surgeon Ben Carson would be the best candidate for president, like Iowa GOP voters did. It’s true. Carson moved into the lead, ahead of Donald Trump, in the Iowa polls, proving that Iowa Republicans are not rocket scientists. Not that they have much to choose from.

All this came on the heels of the 11-hour campaign ad that the GOP House Select Committee on Benghazi gave to Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton by ineptly “grilling” her on national television. It got so bad that even Fox News switched over to other programming.

It’s been a tough week for bacon lovers, dumb thieves, and the GOP. But there’s another Republican debate coming up in a couple days, and I can’t wait. I just need to find some cheese dip.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Guess Where I’m Eating Contest 45


Is it lunchtime yet?

The first person to correctly ID the dish and where I’m eating wins a fabulous prize.

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

The answer to GWIE contest 44 is the cheese dip at Pancho’s, and the winner is … Tim Riley!