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SHE 901Tour

March is for the ladies, and the SHE 901Tour is ready to celebrate women of the past and present this March, with Downtown tours taking guests to women-owned businesses and historical sites centered around pivotal moments in women’s history.

“This is really a collaborative effort,” says Carolyn Michael-Banks, founder and owner of A Tour of Possibilities. For the tour, Michael-Banks partnered with Kristen and Lindsey Archer of ARCHd, a feminist gift shop, and Stephanie Wade of 492 Vance LLC, a firm focused on renovating and rebuilding minority-owned historic properties. The three businesses came together with the goal of highlighting various aspects of women’s empowerment through a dynamic mix of activities and experiences, from arts to food to history.

For the tour, groups of 10 will stop at Muggin’ Coffeehouse, ARCHd, Oh Sweets Skin Care, Stock&Belle, and Urevbu Contemporary, where they’ll hear from business owners about the work that they do. Tour guides will also point out other women-owned businesses along the way. “But one of the things I’m so excited that we’ll have a chance to do,” Michael-Banks says, “and it’s a four letter word that I do throw around a bit — it starts with an S … H … O … P — shop, shop, shop, shop, shop.”

After all, she says, “The S in SHE 901 stands for ‘support’ because we want to support those who are presently doing the work. The H stands for ‘honor,’ so we honor those who came before us, upon whose shoulders we stand today, and the E for ‘empower.’ We also need to empower each other and ourselves.”

Part of the honoring will be done throughout the tour as guides share stories about historical women who shaped Memphis by challenging norms and empowering those around them. The tour will also stop for even more immersive history lessons at the Equality Trailblazers Monument, Griggs Business College, and Ida B. Wells Plaza. At Griggs Business College, the site of Wade’s current project, guests will learn about the school’s history as a Black- and woman-owned institution, as well as the plans for the building’s future as a mixed-use space.

Altogether, Michael-Banks, the Archer sisters, and Wade hope the tour can inspire and connect, highlighting the diverse contributions of women in various industries and in various moments of history. Two tours will be offered every Saturday in March, with tours lasting about four hours. Tickets can be purchased at atopmemphis.com/she901tour.

SHE 901Tour, TN Welcome Center, 119 Riverside Dr., Saturdays in March, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. and 1:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m., $40.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Maciel’s, South Main Sushi, and 387 Pantry open on South Main

Have you heard? Downtown is back. Over the last 15 years, while the population of Memphis has essentially remained flat, downtown has grown by a staggering 25 percent. And as the people have come back, so has the food. Lately two new restaurants and a gourmet grocery have opened along South Main.

The first is Maciel’s Tortas & Tacos, just across the alley from DeJaVu. It’s a tiny restaurant that serves up big flavors, perfect for a casual lunch. Owner Manuel Martinez is from La Michoacán, and family recipes comprise much of his menu.

One of my favorites is the chicken tinga tacos ($9). In Memphis, so much meat is oversauced, from pulled pork to jerked chicken. But these tacos strike the right balance; they are smoky and earthy with just the right level of spice. I also like the guacamole ($3.50), which resembles pico de gallo in that everything is chopped — nothing pureed or mushed.

Martinez says he wants to grow his dinner service, and the food is certainly there. But if he wants to appeal to a downtown dinner crowd, he may have to soften his décor. In its current incarnation, Maciel’s is a symphony of gray, with hard surfaces barely relieved by hand-drawn butcher diagrams.

Moral of the story? Office workers may not mind a no-frills lunch, but in the evening, they long for a little romance.

Maciel’s Tortas & Tacos, 45 S. Main, 526-0037

facebook.com/macielstortastacos

Now, I’m all for fine dining, but most of us can’t afford to eat at Erling Jensen every night. That’s why restaurants like South Main Sushi & Grill are so welcome. The food is tasty, the ambiance is inviting, and you won’t need a second mortgage to pay the check. Owner Ian Vo says he learned that lesson at Ryu Sushi Bar on Summer, which he has managed since 2010.

Vo is Vietnamese, but he has been cooking Japanese food since age 18, when he started flipping shrimp on the grill at Benihana. (“I incorporated magic tricks into my act,” he brags. “I could make an egg stand up all by itself.”) He was recruited into the business by his father, Van Vo, who today rolls all the sushi at the new restaurant on South Main.

This is one good reason to order the sashimi sampler ($9). In typical Japanese fashion, it’s sculptural and minimalistic, a feast for the eyes and the tongue. From there, graduate to gyoza (steamed dumplings, $7), because no one ever regretted a dumpling. If you’re sharing, round out the meal with the spicy seafood udon ($19), which is everything I want in a noodle dish: savory, spicy, and full-bodied.

South Main Sushi, 520 S. Main, 249-2194

facebook.com/southmainsushiandgrill

For those who haven’t had the pleasure, Stock & Belle inhabits an ultra-chic, minimalist space near the National Civil Rights Museum. They sell a bit of everything: clothes, furniture, cut flowers, fancy haircuts, local art. That may sound chaotic, but it works because it’s so well-curated.

In the words of founder Chad West, “It feels like home, and everything’s for sale.”

That same aesthetic applies to the ensuite grocery, 387 Pantry. Here you can find artisan sugar cubes, almond-ginger nut butter, fancy cured ham, Norwegian cream cheese, honeycomb, heirloom grits, Jamaican ginger ale, barbecue pickles, and (of course) bottle openers made in-house from recycled skateboards.

Justin Fox Burks

All right, it ain’t Kroger, but you can definitely build a meal here. For example, at the urging of curator/general manager Josh Conley, I picked up a north Georgia Candy Roaster squash ($8) from Hanna Farm. A hard-to-find heritage vegetable, it’s like the Incredible Hulk to a butternut’s Bruce Banner.

Back home, I baked it in the oven with salt and olive oil, then served it with a fig and balsamic butter ($6) from Banner Butter and sauteed pancetta ($10) from Pigasus. The squash had a nutty flavor, which was beautifully complemented by the salty pancetta and the tangy butter. Best part? Everything was local.

“Cities are judged by their food,” Conley says. “So how cool is it to point at something in the grocery store and say, ‘You know, we made that?'”

387 Pantry, 387 S. Main, 734-2911

instagram.com/387pantry

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Style Sessions We Recommend

Stock&Belle and Salon 387 – Boutique Peek

Now open on South Main is the newest store concept by CrazyBeautiful owner Eryka Smith and Chad West reflective of their partnership and love for style beyond clothing.

“His. Hers. Home. Hair.” – Chad’s latest idea for the Stock&Belle tagline. The two-story building at 387 South Main houses men’s and women’s clothing, shoes, and accessories; furniture, lighting, and home goods; and a salon and barber. 

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“Most everything you can touch is for sale,” says Chad. This even includes the lounge furniture and stools in Salon 387’s waiting area. Salon 387, owned by Elaine Clayton, occupies the second floor, which is accessed by a spiral staircase. 

They also feature art and gfits from local artists such as getarchd and Kyle Taylor. Also self-described as a lifestyle store and urban general store, Stock&Belle has a section for fresh-cut flowers and will stock general grocery items such as fresh produce in the near future.

You may remember this building as the space CrazyBeautiful staged for its holiday pop-up event last year, though the renovation for Stock&Belle has transformed the interiors to have its own distinct character. Through Chad’s design lead and sensibility for material and detail, the interiors feels as crafted as the furniture they carry.

Go visit them today. Here is a look into the new space. Click on the slideshow below to see more images.

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Stock&Belle
Hours: Monday through Saturday, 10 am to 7pm.
Follow them on Instagram: instagram.com/stockandbelle

Salon 387
For appointments: 901-288-6208
instagram.com/salon387