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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Girls Inc. Farm: Working It

On Wednesday, Girls Inc. held its annual Celebration Luncheon at the Holiday Inn University of Memphis. The event honored those who could surely be deemed role models — women who encompass the Girls Inc. ideal of girls being strong, smart, and bold.

This year’s honorees were Joyce Johns, Dr. Jeanne Jamison, Rev. Sonia Louden Walker, and Beverly Robertson.

The luncheon sold out. It raised a record $43,000.

Charles Lennox is the new Director of Food and Beverage for the Holiday Inn University of Memphis. He was enlisted to help put on the luncheon. The girls suggested something more inclusive that would break the binds of an ordinary luncheon. They would make it picnic-style, with produce from the Girls Inc. farm.

“It was one of these serendipitous moments when all of a sudden ideas magically start to line up,” says Lennox. “They wanted to do something that had a feel of a picnic; they wanted to do something family-style, which is not something we’ve done before.”

Lennox and the girls brainstormed. They talked about what was growing on the farm. The ideas (fresh fruit in yogurt and honey, sandwiches, pasta salad, miniature desserts) came to fruition.

Lennox has daughters of his own and recognizes the value of the Girls Inc. to girls who are at a vulnerable age.

Kenya Ghanor is the program manager of Girls Inc. She says the farm program, which launched five years ago, has 15 girls, between the ages of 15 to 18. It is very competitive to get in.

Girls can qualify to be on the farm the second year in the Girls Inc. program, which is four years. The girls are then broken up into groups and assigned tasks, such as weeding, painting, or taking care of the hoop house.

Ghanor says they will break up the day by playing games or having water balloon fights. They’ll do yoga or meditation.

“They come in with whatever is on their mind, and we allow them the space to release it,” says Ghanor.

The girls also man the farmers markets — including the Memphis Farmers Market Downtown — in which they are involved.

The girls grow lettuce, tomatoes, spinach, zucchini, cucumbers, okra, herbs, and flowers on the 9.5 acre farm. They get a stipend for their work.

“They really run the farm,” Ghanor says. “They choose what crops we grow. They do all of the planning. They take care of the markets and all the money.”

She notes that it all fits in the Girls Inc. ethos. “Our mission is to inspire girls to be strong smart, and bold,” Ghanor says. “We’re definitely teaching them how to be strong which is mainly being healthy and making smart choices. Smart — they get a chance to really use their minds and we challenge them. Then they get that entrepreneur experience. They get a chance to speak out and advocate for themselves in the community.”

Another thing the girls do on the farm is keep bees. And from those bees comes the honey that will be used in the fresh fruit and yogurt dish at the luncheon. The honey is also a key element in a new summer cocktail at Strano! — the Girls Inc. Bourbon Bee Sting. A portion of the proceeds from the drink’s sales go to the organization.

Brian Dickerson, the bar manager of Strano!, says doing the cocktail was a no-brainer. They support Girls Inc. and Dickerson was intrigued with what he could do with the honey. Dickerson made a sort of simple syrup with the honey, lemon juice, and the jalapeño (which he’s also used in a Bloody Mary) and stir that in with Buffalo Trace bourbon and Angostura bitters.

“It’s light and refreshing and goes well with the summer heat,” he says.

Dickerson says he liked this project a lot. “Not to politicize it,” he says, “but certainly an organization like this is needed in 2019. Yeah, so I was very very very happy to work with them.”

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Best Bets: Savory blueberry goat cheese flan

Chef Josh Steiner prepares his savory blueberry flan. from Michael Donahue on Vimeo.

Best Bets: Savory blueberry goat cheese flan

I recently tried chef Josh Steiner’s savory blueberry goat cheese flan at his restaurant, Strano! Sicilian Kitchen & Bar.

It’s by far one of the best things I’ve eaten – ever. I’m a sweet-and-savory guy, so this is right up my alley.

There’s a good story about this dish, which doubles as an appetizer and a dessert and, beginning Friday May 5, it will be featured as a special at the restaurant. It’s a Chaine de Rotisseur winner.

I know about Chaine de Rotisseur because a photo picturing the late Justine Smith receiving an award from the food and wine organization is included in Janet Stuart Smith’s book, “Justine’s: Memories and Recipes,” about the legendary Memphis restaurant owned by Justine, Janet’s mother. The white tablecloth restaurant, which was the place to go for fine dining back in the day, closed in the mid 1990s.

The photo shows Justine being knighted with a sword at a Chaine des Rotisseurs ceremony in 1950.

So, I was impressed when Steiner told me he won a bronze medal in the Conference de la Chaines De Rotisseures Jeunes Commis Rotisseur (Young Chefs Competition) at the International Culinary Institute of Myrtle Beach (Florida).

Steiner and about a dozen other chefs from five states participated in the event. “It was a mystery basket competition,” he said. “We had no idea what we were getting into. And we had to do an appetizer, an entree and a dessert.”

Michael Donahue

Savory blueberry goat cheese flan at Strano! Sicilian Kitchen & Bar

Ingredients in his basket included goat cheese, blackberries, cream, flour and fish products. Steiner concocted a dinner that included charred flounder with pickled shrimp and burnt citrus and stuffed quail with pancetta black lintels.


But, Steiner said, “My favorite thing that I made was a savory blueberry goat cheese flan. I thought it was a little complex and it went over extremely well. And you know what? It turned out just the way I wanted it to.”

Steiner showed me how to make this flan. In one bowl he mixed up goat cheese, fresh blueberries, egg yolks, heavy cream and sugar. He added a savory seasoning mixture that includes salt, pepper, granulated garlic, dried basil and dried parsley.

He then moved to the stove and made a roux from the flour and butter “as a stabilizer to help firm up the flan. You want to cook it ‘till it smells like popcorn. So, you want to brown the butter a little bit.”

Steiner added the blueberries-goat cheese mixture to the roux and stirred it until it was smooth. He then ladled that mixture into ramekins and baked them for 15 minutes at 325 degrees before removing them from the oven. “I let them chill and heat them up to order.”

What’s even more impressive about this story is Steiner prepared his dinner after his plane landed – after five flight cancellations trying to get from Memphis to Myrtle Beach – at 3 a.m. The competition was at 7 a.m. “I didn’t have time to get nervous,” he said.

No sword was handy in Steiner’s kitchen, but I felt like knighting him on the shoulder with a Ginsu.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Strano’s Fried Cheese-Stuffed Olives

When you think of deep-fried food, your thoughts probably go to fried pickles, tomatoes, okra, hush puppies … What about fried olives? I didn’t think so.

Strano! Sicilian Kitchen & Bar‘s fried house-brined olives are stuffed with garlic Italian cheese and are served with mushrooms ($8). The plate is small, you get about six fried olives. They’re crunchy green olives, which made the taste salty and slightly bitter. The cheese was nice and gooey but the olives overpowered its flavor. The mushrooms were cooked just right and had an earthy taste.

This dish would be top-notch if there was a mix of black and green olives and more than one kind of cheese. 

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Donuts for Dessert!

Ginger Donuts with Coconut Sorbet

“When my family eats at the restaurant, they always get the ginger donuts,” says Tsunami’s owner and chef Ben Smith.

The ginger donuts with coconut sorbet ($8) at Tsunami have been a solid seller for five or six years. Smith says they tie nicely into the restaurant’s Pacific Rim theme, while also honoring the South’s love of deep-fried foods.

Stacey Greenberg

Tsunami’s ginger donuts

The ginger donuts are about the size of golf balls and have a crusty exterior and a cakey, gooey interior and are dusted with powdered sugar. They aren’t too sweet. Their deliciousness lies somewhere between coffee cake and funnel cake.

Smith says they aren’t your standard donut as they are a bit denser and are laced with fresh ginger. “The fresh ginger makes a big difference and gives a big punch of flavor,” he says. There are three per order, and it is a hearty dessert.

He didn’t always pair them with a big scoop of his coconut sorbet, but once he did he found it was the perfect match and provided balance. The final touch on the dish is a light coating of ginger syrup, also made with fresh ginger. “It’s a double whammy of fresh ginger,” says Smith.

Zappolies

Down the street, Josh Steiner is making a name for himself at Strano by sharing his family’s Sicilian and Moroccan influenced recipes. His carrot cake has been creating a lot of buzz, but the Zappolies ($7.50) on the brunch menu are a must try. (They are available by special request at dinner.) There are six per order.

The Zeppola is a traditional Italian pastry. Billed as his “Family’s Recipe for Donuts Rolled in Cinnamon Sugar with a side of Berry Sweet Sauce,” the Zappolies are reminiscent of a traditional beignet. Let’s call them cousins. The Zappolies are a tad smaller, a little more free form in shape, and feature cinnamon sugar rather than powdered sugar. The texture is almost exactly the same.

Stacey Greenberg

Strano’s Zappolies

What make Strano’s Zappolies really special are the accompanying dipping sauces. The “Berry sweet sauce” includes a little Campari and is devilishly sweet. As a bonus, a heavenly hazelnut dipping sauce also accompanied my order. Imagine a thinner, warmer Nutella. It was hard to say which sauce was better for dipping, but it was fun trying to figure it out.

Korean Doughnuts

Crazy Noodle chef Ji Won Choi says her Korean donut holes ($5.99) are traditional, but the dessert presentation is not. She makes them with wheat flour mixed with green tea powder, so they are not at all sweet, but they have a very appealing flavor.

Slightly larger than marbles, the donuts are cakey and quite dense — perfect for repeatedly popping into one’s mouth. The menu shows them to be a bit larger, but my order had nine of the small donut holes surrounding a heaping mound of vanilla ice cream, crisscrossed with generous amounts of chocolate sauce, and topped with a heavy dusting of sugar and cinnamon. The presentation is quite festive — so much so that it seemed like it was my birthday. Or someone’s!

The dessert is definitely a crowd pleaser. My children practically licked the plate clean.

(The menu description says “this dessert contains nuts,” but no actual nuts were observed — only donuts!)

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Guess Where I’m Eating Contest 60

Some healthier fare for this week’s contest … 

The first person to 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 59 is a Benedict from Strano, and … no one guessed it.  

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Taste of Cooper Young Thursday

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The Bouffants have a motto: “The higher the hair, the closer to God.” So it seems especially appropriate that the popular showband, with its ever-changing cast of big-voiced (and bigger-wigged) singers, should headline Thursday’s A Taste of Cooper Young. The annual party for Memphis foodies used to benefit the Memphis Literacy Council, but the event has been taken over by First Congregational Church, and proceeds go toward funding the progressive church’s various outreach ministries.

Starting at 5 p.m., participants can pick up wristband from First Congregational Church. The wristband entitles the wearer to a small dish, or “tasting,” at a dozen popular Cooper Young area restaurants all within walking distance of the church.

Participating restaurants and food-related businesses include Alchemy, Bar DKDC, The Beauty Shop, Cafe Ole, Celtic Crossing, Sweet Crass, Mulan, Strano, Stone Soup, Soul Fish, Green Cork, and Get Fresh.

The food tasting continues till 8:30 p.m. Meanwhile, saxophonist Pat Register will be performing in the corner gazebo and the Bouffants will play from 8 p.m.-9:30 p.m. in the sanctuary at First Congo, where a silent auction will also be conducted.

First Congo is a justice-minded church. Its outreach ministries range from traditional food ministries, to community gardens, to a “Blessed Bee” program that helps to repopulate devastated bee populations.

A Taste of Cooper-Young is Thursday, September 18th, 5:30-9 p.m., $50
tasteofcooperyoung.com

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

A Visit to Strano

Pam and I met up for lunch at the recently opened Strano Sicilian Kitchen & Bar in Cooper-Young.

We started with the terrific roasted carrot bisque ($8), which was creamy but not so rich as to overwhelm earthy flavor of the carrots.

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I had my eye on a number of dishes — particularly the Pasta Capelli D’angelo alla olive (angel hair pasta with Tuscan olive oil, roasted garlic, portobello mushrooms, sundried tomatoes, black olives, and baked parmesan) and the Cinque Formaggio Pizza (roasted garlic olive oil base with mozzarella, gouda, ricotta, pecorino Romano Parmigiano, and fontina cheeses topped with truffle oil). But I went with the artichoke, fennel, and fontina panini ($8.95) because the oven-braised fennel sounded really good, and it was a fine sandwich, grilled to the perfect crunch. (Paninis at lunch only.)

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Pam ordered the pizza special of the day, which came with sundried tomatoes and artichoke hearts. We oohed and aahed over the pizza’s bready, top-notch crust. Easily the favorite dish of the meal.

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Personal size pizzas are 12-inches and start at $16. Large pizzas are 18 inches.

We topped off the meal with a massive and very pretty slice of carrot cake.

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Pam declared the cream-cheese icing as classic, and while we made a few dents into the dessert, the rest was wrapped up to enjoy later.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Now open: Strano and Ecco on Overton Park

The kitchen doors fling open inside the swank new Sicilian restaurant at Cooper and Young.

Out walks Strano‘s owner and head chef, Josh Steiner, some two-day stubble failing to camouflage that Steiner celebrated his 23rd birthday on May 30th in conjunction with the restaurant’s grand opening.

The third of four siblings, Steiner spent his childhood in the kitchen with his Moroccan and Italian grandmothers. Soon he was working at Russo’s, the family’s Italian restaurant in Germantown, collecting kitchen equipment for his birthdays, working with Karen Carrier at Beauty Shop, and taking a three-week culinary crash course in Sicily.

Sourcing ingredients from his family’s nearby 100-acre farm and using FedEx to overnight his fish — a nod to the 11-hour expiration rule of his Italian mentors — Steiner takes a traditional approach, avoiding heavy sauces and focusing on foods like vegetable couscous and stuffed eggplant.

The twist is in the presentation, like the column of white oak wood smoke that emerges from the glass chamber on top of the grilled swordfish ($26).

justin fox burks

Josh Steiner

Steiner also uses an anti-griddle, he explains, while dashing back to the kitchen and emerging with a blob of caramel on the end of a toothpick that morphs into a dab of rich sauce in seconds. The anti-griddle flash-freezes salad dressing, which then melts in front of customers, or honey, which becomes marble hard before dissolving.

He adds caviar to drinks at the bar, which changes the flavor midway through, and injects strawberries and grapes with carbonation, using them instead of soda water in sangria.

“You can’t create recipes. Every recipe has already been done. So the only way to do it is how you present it. I feel like people eat with their eyes, their ears, their nose, not just their mouth, and so I play with senses, I play with textures. I even play with time,” Steiner says.

But it’s not all flash and new-age. “Grandma’s Meatballs” ($8) come from an old family recipe.

“My great grandmother sautéed them for just a split second, just to change the color on the outside. I’m talking so they’re still as rare as can be in the middle,” Steiner says. “And then she let them sit inside her marinara sauce for 24 hours while it’s on a low simmer. And that’s how you get them so moist and falling apart.”

Sabine Bachmann anguished over the name of her new Overton Park restaurant, heavy on Italian and Mediterranean influences, before settling on Ecco on Overton Park.

“Ecco is an Italian word. It means ‘here it is.’ I thought it was appropriate,” Bachmann says.

Lounging on the back patio during a recent Sunday, snacking on hot wings and sipping a cold drink, Bachmann pointed out a small plot of grass that one day will produce tomatoes and herbs for the restaurant. She spent her childhood in Germany, Italy’s dairy country, and France, where the family vacationed frequently; her dad made his own wine, and her neighbors were goat herders.

Her upbringing heavily influenced the atmosphere and menu for the restaurant.

“To me, food is not only about nourishment, but about people getting together around the same table and enjoying their time together,” Bachmann says. “I like the concept of how they cook over there, which is to use really good ingredients and don’t mess with them a lot.”

Armando Gagliano, her 25-year-old son, is the head chef and created most of the menu after dropping out of nursing school recently to pursue cooking. According to Gagliano, the orange-glazed Berkshire pork chop ($19) has emerged as a customer favorite.

Served with white wine risotto and an apple-onion chutney, he uses a spiced orange tea brine and cooks the meat sous vide to retain moisture.

Other menu items are the linguini with kale pesto featuring Tuscan kale and pesto Genovese ($10); chicken legs with marinated lemons and olives ($16); and a vegetarian lentil stew with tomatoes, potatoes, onion, garlic, and tofu ($10).

“People should live to eat instead of eating to live,” Gagliano says. “That’s kind of a stupid little cliché that chefs say.”

Maybe so, but as the breeze wafted through the patio, the Ecco staff conversing over an unhurried meal, it seemed fitting.

Here it is indeed.