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MEMernet: Flight, Porch & Parlor, and Getting Tanked at Kroger

MEMernet: Flight, Porch & Parlor, and Getting Tanked at Kroger (4)

Taking Flight
Digital stories spilled out into the streets of Memphis as protesters bullhorned and blocked streets near Flight Restaurant and Wine Bar and Porch & Parlor after a barrage of allegations were made online against the restaurants and their owners.

Facebook posts surfaced last week with allegations that Flight managers had instructed workers to seat African-American diners in an upstairs dining room so they would not be seen from the street in the downstairs dining room. The posts caught fire and soon were blazing on other social channels like Twitter, Instagram, and Reddit.

MEMernet: Flight, Porch & Parlor, and Getting Tanked at Kroger (2)

On Saturday morning, Flight issued a statement on Facebook addressing the posts, saying that “we are committed to determine their validity.”

“We take all allegations of discriminatory behavior seriously and refuse to tolerate this type of behavior at our restaurant. To the extent that we learn that any of these accusations are true, these employees will be terminated immediately.”

Flight and Porch & Parlor are owned by the same company. Criticism and allegations of both were proliferating all over the Memphis internet over the weekend.

MEMernet: Flight, Porch & Parlor, and Getting Tanked at Kroger

Protesters with bullhorns massed outside Flight Saturday evening. On Saturday, protesters taunted diners at Porch & Parlor and blocked the intersection of Cooper and Madison. On Sunday, protesters planned another protest, and a Facebook post noted that “Russ [Graham, co-owner of the restaurants], we want answers and we want them now!”

Back again tonight! from r/memphis

MEMernet: Flight, Porch & Parlor, and Getting Tanked at Kroger (3)


Getting Tanked

We’re still searching for answers to this very good question posted to Facebook by Johnathan Lifsey from the Germantown Kroger store.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Porch & Parlor Opens in Overton Square

MIchael Donahue

The parlor at Porch & Parlor

Michael Donahue

The porch at Porch & Parlor

Don’t look for wicker furniture on the porch and Victorian furniture in the parlor at Porch & Parlor. The gas lights, book shelves, and elegance of the new Overton Square restaurant evoke the turn of the 20th Century.


Porch & Parlor, which opens tonight (February 17th), is housed at 2125 Madison in a circa 1908 building.

“We tried to embrace the era,” says Russ Graham, who, along with Tom Powers comprise the Flight Restaurant Group. They are the owners of Flight, Southern Social, and Coastal Fish Company.

The era between the end of the Franco Prussian War and World War I (1871 to 1914) was known as the Belle Epoque (“Beautiful Age”) era in France. “Champagne flowed,” Graham says.

Impressionist painters, including Renoir and Monet, were the rage. So, impressionist works line the restaurant walls.

All the booths in the “parlor” section of the restaurant, which seats 36 people, are made of real leather. Bookshelves line the walls.

The elegant dining room seats 60 people. And the bar seats another 54.

The wide, welcoming porch on the front will seat 65.

Graham describes the food as “Southern style steakhouse. So, in addition to, say, a Wagyu filet, you can add fried green tomatoes and collard greens to your meal. The quality of the steaks can’t be found anywhere else in Memphis,” Graham says. Paul Walsh is executive chef. Eduardo Murillo is the corporate executive chef.

If you’re wondering why a wooden bear head is in the center of the arch over the bar, it’s because it’s supposed to be a likeness of Natch, a Southern black bear who was the mascot of the old Memphis Turtles baseball team in 1908. Because of Natch, the Memphis Zoo eventually was built, Graham says.

The restaurant is curved shape because that part of Cooper and Madison was the “end of the city,” Graham says. Trolleys coming from Downtown would turn around at that corner and return Downtown.

Porch & Parlor, like the other Flight Restaurant Group restaurants, will be open 365 days a year. Porch & Parlor is open for dinner only, but, eventually, will open for brunch on Saturdays and Sundays.

Michael Donahue

The dining room at Porch & Parlor

Michael Donahue

The bar at Porch & Parlor

Michael Donahue

Paul Walsh, Franck Oysel, Eduard Murillo, and Ashton Hall at Porch & Parlor

Michael Donahue

Porch & Parlor in Overton Square

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Coastal Fish Company slated to open at the end of October in Shelby Farms

Michael Donahue

Coastal Fish Company patio at Shelby Farms

Lauren Resh

View of Hyde Lake from Coastal Fish Company

If I want fresh Gulf seafood, I have to travel about six hours to Biloxi and Gulfport. When Coastal Fish Company opens at the end of October, I’ll only have to travel about 20 minutes from Midtown Memphis.

This is the new restaurant brought to you by Russ Graham and Tom Powers of the Flight Restaurant Group. They are the owners of Flight, Southern Social, and the upcoming Porch & Parlor restaurants. Coastal Fish Company is in the space previously occupied by the old Kitchen American Bistro.

First of all, Coastal Fish Company offers the most beautiful view of any restaurant in Memphis. It looks out on peaceful 80-acre Hyde Lake. Diners can eat inside and feel like they’re eating outside. Or, they can eat outside and be outside on the spacious patio. All of this, including the food, feels like your on the Gulf Coast, or in Florida, Or, actually, on any body of water you choose.

The decor is in light brown and the appropriate blue. New chairs and new tables now grace the restaurant. All new light fixtures were added.

The desk at the front entrance has been replaced by a new desk with a partial wall behind it. Tables have been added behind that wall so people now can dine in the bar area.

During my visit, I saw Lauren Resch, Graham’s fiance, painting some blue design work behind the bar, which also has new light fixtures as well as a TV to add “energy behind the bar,” Graham says.

Diners who visited the previous restaurant will notice everything has been removed that obstructed the view of the lake. Anything waist high was taken out, Graham says. A large chandelier also was removed. “We want everything to focus on the lake,” he says.

The patio area features 21 tables with seating for more than 90 people. The inside area offers 24 tables.

They plan to add a six or seven-foot table that will only back up to the front railing, so diners can be even closer to the lake.

Coastal Fish Company feels like a destination restaurant – like you’re far away from Memphis – when you’re sitting on the patio, says managing partner Jason Burgardt. “You look at the sunset and you stop. You forget where you are.

You can still keep your bearings if you desire. “If you look out there, you can see Clark Tower,” Graham says.

A glass wall currently is being made for the south side of the patio, because the wind tends to blow from the south, Burgardt says. They also will have chimineas and 16 or 17 heaters. The patio area will “look warm and feel warm,” Burgardt says.

Now for the food.

Executive chef Ryan Gall worked at Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse in Biloxi, Emeril Lagasse properties, including Emeril’s Gulf Coast Fish House in Biloxi. Recently, he was executive chef at TPC Southwind, which is part of the PGA tour.

Ashton Hall is director of culinary for all the restaurants owned by Flight Restaurant Group. Eduardo Murillo is corporate executive chef.

I took a tour of the spacious kitchen, which also has a TV. But this television set shows what’s going on in all their restaurants. Murillo got the idea when he visited Thomas Keller’s TAK room in New York.

You can order wood-fired oysters, which are the only thing the restaurant’s wood oven will be used for, Gall says. They will be charbroiled on cast iron skillets.

You also can order raw oysters, but don’t expect to get a paper cup of red sauce and horseradish. You can pair the oysters with a variety of sorbets, including apple wasabi, cocktail, lemon, champagne, and chili and passion fruit. I was blown away when I tried the apple wasabi with an oyster. I love sweet and savory, so this was the zenith for that flavor mix. It’s incredible. Ditto the chili and passion fruit I tried. I can’t wait to try them all.

Like all their seafood, the oysters are flown in fresh from the Gulf and the East Coast – from Maine all the way down to Florida.

The fresh fish includes Gulf snapper, tuna, grouper, speckled trout, Chilean sea bass, shellfish, including lobster, and red fish for “a little taste of New Orleans.”

But they want to do seafood preparation from all over, not just New Orleans. “The best seafood the world has to offer and bring it to Memphis,” Gall says.

Soups include lobster bisque, clam chowder, she-crab soup, and gumbo.

You also can build a “seafood tower,” which can include levels of oysters, a half lobster, shrimp, stone crab claws, caviar, and mussels. You get all of that if you order a “grand tower.’ Or, you can order everything individually.

The accent is on “fresh” and “quality,” Gall says. Nothing frozen at Coastal Fish Company. “We want to open up people’s minds to real fish.”

And, he says, “You feel like you’re at a boat house on the lake,” he says.

Meat includes “from the farm” ribeye and pork chops, “All steaks are prime,” Gall says.

Desserts will include key lime pie, which you can get coated with your choice of chocolate, including salted dark chocolate. You also can order strawberry key lime pie and pineapple upside down cake.

Drew Wooten is bar manager. The bar will feature craft cocktails. They will specialize in wines that will perfectly pair with seafood.

You can sit on the patio, watch the sunset, and wash down some of those raw oysters with a glass of Chenin Blanc at Coastal Fish Company.

And Biloxi will be 372.5 miles away.

Michael Donahue

Lauren Resch paints some detail work over the bar of Coastal Fish Company, which is slated to open at the end of October.

Michael Donahue

Ashton Hall, Ryan Gall, and Eduardo Murillo at Coastal Fish Company.

Michael Donahue

Coastal Fish Company bar manager Drew Wooten, assistant manager Sarah Applebaum, and managing partner Jason Burgardt.


Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Porch & Parlor opening in Bar Louie Space

Loeb Properties announced today that a new restaurant will open in the Bar Louie space in Overton Square.

It will be called Porch & Parlor, from the folks behind Flight and Southern Social.

From the release:

Loeb Properties, Inc. is pleased to announce the arrival of a new business at 2125 Madison Avenue (map) in Overton Square. Porch & Parlor restaurant will be opening in the 5,982 sf space with plans to begin construction within the next month. Loeb Properties was represented by Aaron Petree, CCIM.

Porch & Parlor is a fine-dining concept from Tom Powers and Russ Graham, the duo behind popular Memphis restaurants Flight in Downtown Memphis and Southern Social in Germantown.

The space includes a large patio space on the corner of Cooper and Madison which will act as a centerpiece for the restaurant’s concept: A graceful and elegant porch that embraces the lively outdoor neighborhood balancing a parlor interior at the heart of the restaurant for quiet and intimate dining, both imbued with the restaurant’s signature high-end, fine dining experience.