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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Clockwork Catering Company

If Clockwork Catering Company served duck a l’orange, it could be nicknamed “Clockwork Orange Catering Company.”

But Reuben Skahill’s catering business has nothing to do with the Anthony Burgess book.

“The reasoning behind the name is I wanted to provide catering that’s on time and in the right place,” says Skahill, 31.

“Just kind of like clockwork. Very ‘time is right.’” The time also was right for Skahill to start his own catering business.

“I have been working with the local food community in different positions and different voices. And everywhere I’ve gone I’ve been asked to help out people and businesses. And it’s been a really awesome experience.”

Born in Boston, Skahill moved to Memphis when he was a teenager. He was co-founder of — but no longer affiliated with — Memphis Sandwich Clique. He also was founder of the old Clique HQ, an “underground sandwich speakeasy.”

Now, Skahill wants to put everything he’s learned into one business. “I’ve catered before, but I’ve never owned a catering business. I’ve done every part of this in different parts of my jobs. From the kitchen to delivery to behind-the-scenes, doing the business and paperwork stuff. I’ve done every one of these aspects at different parts of my life. And, hopefully, now I can put them all together and, hopefully, make something happen.”

Clockwork Catering Company is “catering for large events or for your lunches at your office parties.” It’s also “available for anything,” including “last minute Christmas parties, holiday parties, divorce parties.”

As for the food, Skahill says, “This menu I have is more practical and less fantastical.”

His sandwiches include turkey and cheese, a classic club sandwich, and an Italian sub. Skahill’s entrees include his mom’s “famous Everything Sesame Salmon. It’s salmon with toasted sesame seed oil, a little soy sauce, and Everything seasoning from Everything Bagels. This is one of the things I’m most excited to bring to the world because I get to eat it and now other people will.”

Skahill is also prepared to do “lasagna, taco bars, a baked potato bar, and barbecued pulled pork.”

His desserts include New York-style cheesecake and chocolate strawberries. “I’ve got all these things available in trays.”

Jennifer Alexander, who owns Corporate Cuisine, lets Skahill work out of her kitchen. Skahill also helps Alexander with her catering jobs.

The shared work space is ideal. “It’s a nice little place where I can create all this food and deliver it.”

Skahill also physically helps out at events. “Take care of the service part of the events as well.

“Essentially, I can bring the food and then serve it to people and make sure the trays are full.”

Skahill’s first food-related job was when he was in his late teens working at the old Holy Cow kosher restaurant at Memphis Jewish Community Center. “I worked on a poolside grill for two and a half years doing burgers and hot dogs and simple stuff. Chicken pitas.”

Skahill learned the delivery aspect of catering by working as a delivery driver for Amerigo Italian Restaurant and Jimmy John’s.

“I know I’ve been doing things for a reason,” Skahill says. Now, he adds, “It’s all coming together.”

He’s not trying to be a “celebrity chef,” Skahill says. “I’m not trained to be a three-star Michelin chef. I’m not trying to be recognized by the community for my prowess in the kitchen. But I’m going to make quality food, locally made, delivered on time, in the right place.”

By the way, Reuben Skahill also makes Reuben sandwiches. “Corn beef on marbled rye with melted Swiss, Thousand Island dressing, and some sauerkraut. I have been eating Reuben sandwiches since I’ve had teeth. And I feel like I’m going out on a limb here when I say I feel like I have a good grip on what Reuben sandwiches should taste like.”

To reach Clockwork Catering Company, call 901-289-2493 or go to clockworkcateringcompany.com.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Foodies’ Favorites

“My Favorite Things,” which has become a holiday classic song over the years, triggered the idea to ask Memphis chefs and food aficionados what memory sticks with them as one of the best things they’ve ever eaten anywhere. They might not be able to fit it into a stocking, but it ranks up there with “bright copper kettles and warm woolen mittens.”

Kelly English, chef/owner of Restaurant Iris, The Second Line, Panta, and Fino’s from the Hill: “There is one dish that really made my mind up to jump in and try to be a chef — the gnocchi and gulf crab meat with truffle at the restaurant August in New Orleans. On a flavor and texture level, this was a mind-blowing dish. But it was simple. It’s a bite I will never forget.”

Keun Anderson, head chef at Texas de Brazil: “I love anime and Naruto is one of my favorite animes. So, when it comes to the best food I ever had, I can’t help myself. I love ramen. And Flame Ramen is the best.”

Reuben Skahill, veteran Memphis bartender/server: “I had a bender of goat cheese pasta with blackened chicken from Amerigo [Italian Restaurant] five days a week for three years and was always satisfied … warm pasta that makes its own creamy sauce from the goat cheese and sun-dried tomatoes as you mix all the flavors together.”

Karen Barrett, chef/owner of The Happy Belly Company of Memphis: “One of my favorite food memories is when I was learning to cook with my great-grandmother, and she literally made the best sweet potato pie I’ve ever had in my life. The crust was perfect and her pie filling was so rich and deeply colored you’d almost think it was pumpkin. … I won’t share the secret to her pie, but I will tell you there’s nothing wrong with adding a little bourbon in your recipe. Trust me on this one.”

Josh Steiner, MealMD executive chef: “My grandma Jacqueline’s lasagna. It has all kinds of cheeses like whipped ricotta mixed with fresh herbs. It also has a lot of fresh marinara. And I like to add lots of black pepper to it.”

Jimmy “Sushi Jimmi” Sinh, chef/owner of Poke Paradise food truck: “The tomahawk [steak] from Folk’s Folly. It’s a lot better ’cause the bone adds more flavor to the meat. And they just make it the way I like it.”

Justin Hughes, assistant pastry chef at The Peabody: “One of the best things I’ve had was from The Crazy Noodle. It was the cucumber salad and spicy Korean ramen they serve. The ramen is well-balanced with flavor.”

Nick Scott, chef/owner of Salt|Soy: “My friend Mitsu Isoda ran Jewel Bako in New York. He did a dry-aged bluefin tuna nigiri. It was the absolute best piece of fish that I’ve ever tasted. He now runs Omakase Room by Mitsu in New York. He dry-aged it for around 25 days in a very cold temperature. It compounded the flavor and tenderized the meat. It melted as you ate it. He brushed soy on it and put a small amount of wasabi underneath the fish. It didn’t need anything. It was easily the best thing I’ve eaten.”

Miles Tamboli, chef/owner of Tamboli’s Pasta & Pizza: “Artesano pizza bar, town of Lagoa da Conceicao on the island of Santa Catarina in the city of Florianopolis, Brazil. This place used to be way less fancy. When I went there around 2005 they had this burger they called the X Burger that had everything you can imagine on it. Two patties, peas, corn, a hot dog, special sauce, a slab of ham, all kinds of shit. It was incredible.”

Schuyler O’Brien, founder/creator of Over Yonder ice cream: “The best meal I ever had was a 13-course tasting menu at The Barn at Blackberry Farm. The most memorable thing I’ve ever eaten were the Pig Face Parker House rolls from Odd Duck in Austin — classic yeast rolls stuffed with braised pig face on house Dijon mustard.”

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Clique HQ — a “Sandwich Speakeasy” — Slated to Open in January

Ryan Joseph Hopgood, Keun Anderson, and Reuben Skahill of Clique HQ.



You won’t see a door with a peephole that opens so you can say, “G Reub sent me,” but  Clique HQ, a  “sandwich speakeasy,” is slated to open in January in a brick-and-mortar building, where members of the Memphis Sandwich Clique Facebook group can order sandwiches.

So, all you have to do is join Memphis Sandwich Clique and you can order one of the sammies.

“We’ve got one of the best chefs in town doing our menu,” says Reuben “G Reub” Skahill. “We’re going to create sandwiches and wings and egg rolls.”

Skahill, Ryan Joseph Hopgood, and chef Keun Anderson are the the guys behind the project.

“It’s a to-go place where you get served in your car by me with a briefcase with your food in it,” Skahill says. “I’ll come to your car.”

And, he says, it’s going to be “a very exclusive place.”

They’re using a Mafia theme, he says. “You know how the Mafia uses delis as fronts for their businesses? We’re using the Mafia as a front for our business.”

Describing the “Don Sandwich,” one of the menu items, Skahill says, “It’s turkey, slaw, honey mustard, and pepper jack cheese on a toasted Gambino (bakery) roll.”

Updates, photos, and videos will be posted on Memphis Sandwich Clique, which Skahill says, “highlights the brightest sandwiches and sandwich minds in the city. And possibly the world.”

Also, he says, updates will be posted “by word of mouth.”

And, Skahill says, “We will post pics of actual sandwiches you can order on Memphis Sandwich Clique and Shook Memphis (local Memphis products blog) social media.”

They’re already working on the menu, Skahill says. “We have our sandwiches on paper and we’re making those sandwiches today.”

Skahill doesn’t want to say much right now. “I want it to have an air of mystery.”

But, he says, “We’re legal and licensed to sell these sandwiches.”

 As for the official opening date, Skahill says, “We don’t have a set date. We might change the menu a couple of times.”



Where is it going to be? “There are those that say that it’s located at 813 Ridge Lake Blvd., but nobody alive can confirm or deny it.”

Skahill is “super excited” about the new restaurant. “This is actually an opportunity for us to legitimately change the city’s landscape on sandwiches.”

As of right now, Skahill, Hopgood, and Anderson aren’t wearing pinstripe suits. “If you have a vest or a fedora I could borrow, I could use it,” Skahill says. “But I do have a briefcase with a combination lock on it for unmarked bills or sandwiches.”

Skahill, a rapper, says “G Reub” is short for his rapper name “Gangsta Reuben.”

And, he says, “If you listen closely to the streets, you might hear the Clique anthem coming out soon.”

Stay tuned.

Wings from Clique HQ.