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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

“Soul Bowl” Coming to The Four Way Restaurant

The Four Way Restaurant will introduce a new item beginning March 10th during Memphis Black Restaurant Week. And I can’t wait.

Get ready for the “Soul Bowl.”

“A lot of people have different bowls at certain restaurants,” says The Four Way owner Patrice Bates Thompson. “Our bowl is going to be cornbread and you’re going to have a hole where you’re going to put in sides. Mine would be mac [and cheese], yams, and cabbage. Inside of a bowl made out of cornbread.”

Sides can be “anything you want.”

But, Thompson says, “I typically don’t like my food to touch. You can’t be that person. Because the sides are going to go in the center of hot cornbread. And they’re going to sit there together.”

The idea of the juice from the sides soaking into the cornbread is driving me crazy. I can already taste it. I’m imagining all the different side items inside of that cornbread bowl, which I also can’t wait to devour.

Thompson would like to leave the “Soul Bowl” on the menu. “I hope we can. I hope people love it and we can. That’s my goal. I don’t want it to be a temporary thing.”

Check it out during Memphis Black Restaurant Week and spread the word.

According its website, Memphis Black Restaurant Week, which will be held March 6th through 12th, will feature more than 25 Black-owned restaurants. The event is “an opportunity for Black-owned restaurants to offer dining deals to bring in new customers and raise awareness. It allows the country to support minority owned eateries.”

The Four Way Restaurant is at 998 Mississippi Boulevard; (901) 507-1519.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Four Way Restaurant Receives $40,000 Grant

The Four Way Soul Food Restaurant has been awarded a $40,000 “Backing Historic Small Restaurants” grant from American Express.

The award was announced April 27th on the Today Show.

According to its web site, American Express (NYSE: AXP), in partnership with the National Trust for Historic Preservation, is providing the “Backing Historic Small Restaurants” grant, which is “a more than $1 million investment to preserve historic restaurants in the U. S. as they continue to navigate the pandemic and plan for recovery.”

And, it says, “Through the grant program, small historic restaurant owners will have the opportunity to improve, upgrade, and preserve their physical spaces and online businesses, as well as mitigate existing operating costs. For example restaurants can rehabilitate the exteriors of historic buildings and facades, expand outdoor dining, upgrade their takeout and online ordering systems, or establish a stronger online presence. Updates like these are critical for future success in a post pandemic world.”

Four Way owner Patrice Bates Thompson, who appeared on the Today show, is part of the Bates lineage that has owned the restaurant at 998 Mississippi Boulevard since 2002. Her parents, the late Willie Earl Bates and the late Jo Ellen Bates, bought the restaurant, which originally was opened in 1946 by Clint and Irene Cleaves.  Dr. Martin Luther King is among the many notables who have dined at The Four Way.

Thompson, who was interviewed in the Flyer, says she worked at The Four Way from the time her dad bought  it. “I was office manager at Metropolitan Baptist Church,” she says in the article. “I could walk from my church in five minutes in the next block and work at The Four Way.”

And, according to the story, Bates did whatever she needed to do. “I’d work in the kitchen. I’d work the register. If I had to serve, I’d serve. To be honest, I still do that. Sometimes you’re short handed. You never know when your employees are going to come in and have a chip on their shoulder and not do what they’re supposed to do. I just fill in where I need to. You might come in next week and see me on the line.”

Thompson surprised when she heard on the Today Show that Four Way had won.

“I was extremely excited and I was actually shocked,” she says.

Thompson was interviewed a while back by the show, but not about the grant, which she had applied for. “They told us they wanted to talk to different restaurants and see how we were faring during the pandemic,” she says. And, she says, “I supposed it would be a discussion about how we made adjustments and changed the way we ran our business during the pandemic.”

And, she says, “I just didn’t make the connection. They did a great job keeping the secret.”

As for the $40,000, Thompson says, “The grant I applied for is in conjunction wth the National Trust for Historic Preservation and the whole initiative is to help legendary restaurants improve the outdoor look of there restaurant. Preserve the outdoors. Either outdoor dining or painting your building or, if need be, removing trash and things of that story.

 “We’re considering outdoor dining. I’m not sure how to do it. We’ve had severe accidents on that corner. We don’t want anybody to risk their lives eating outdoors.

They might do landscaping and freshen up the green-and-tan building, she says. Thompson also would like to maybe add outdoor benches so customers will have a place to sit while waiting for their table.