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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Bryant’s Breakfast Doubling Space on Summer Avenue

In addition to a Bryant’s Big Breakfast, diners soon will be getting a bigger Bryant’s Breakfast & Lunch.

That’s the upcoming new name of the iconic restaurant at 3965 Summer Avenue, says Judd Tashie, co-owner of the Tashie Restaurant Group. The expanded restaurant — which is doubling its space — is set to open in October.

The Tashie Group bought the restaurant after owner Phil Bryant decided to sell it November 2020. It reopened April 14th, 2021. The group recently bought La Esperanza Tienda Mexicana, a supermarket next door to Bryant’s Breakfast.

Bryant’s Bakery bought the old La Esperanza Tienda Mexicana next door. (Credit: Michael Donahue)

They now have an “expanded footprint, expanded menu,” Tashie says. The total space of the restaurant will be 4,200 square feet. But, he says, “We’re not taking the space just to have a lot more seats. The point is the kitchen was just too small to do everything we want to do.”

They plan to open longer hours, seven days a week and do plate lunches. “A big part of the rationale was to allow us to expand our offering in terms of menu in an effort to launch this plate lunch and stay open later.”

The group bought the store around the end of June “from a lady who’s been operating it for a long long time. She was looking to do something different. She was ready to retire.”

Tashie says, “We put a door to Bryant’s and we cleared the store out.” As for what the new space will look like, he says, “We don’t have an exact layout, but we’re going to expand the kitchen, run it vertically the way it is now all the way across into this space. We’ll have a proper prep kitchen, a walk-in cooler. So, we’re just going to have a lot more room to work with that will allow us to do plate lunches and other things. And we’ll be able to stay open later to accommodate people who want to eat lunch. It will allow us more room to prep to stay open.”

There will be more seating as well as a lunch counter with stools in the expanded area. “Imagine a 1950s luncheonette.” They also will feature a “self-serve grab and go” hot box concept, where customers pressed for time can select what they want and pay for it right away.

But, Tashie says, “Part of the charm of Bryant’s is it’s tight. It’s small. And it creates a buzz because of that.”

They are considering staying open later “as the market and our customers dictate. We’re here to please.”

What about dinner at Bryant’s? “If people want it, we’re here to give it to them.”

The plate lunches will include the “traditional Southern meat and three offerings” Bryant’s is known for, Tashie says.

They’ve already hired Frankie Gattuso, formerly of Cupboard and Pete & Sam’s, who will be the lead cook and in charge of menu development. “He came over with the express intent to do the plate lunches.”

Jesus  “Cooper” Marquez is “our right arm in terms of kitchen operations.” And, Tashie says, “General manager Richard Lucchesi will continue to lead all facets of the operation.”

After they bought Bryant’s Breakfast, Tashie said in a Flyer interview, all they did was “optimize all the equipment, get all the former staff back, and reprint the menus.”

He also said buying the restaurant was “a great opportunity” because Bryant’s “has a great reputation for great food, great service. It’s a Memphis classic.”

The Tashie Group also bought La Baguette French Bread and Pastry Shop in Chickasaw Oaks. A second La Baguette at 5101 Sanderlin Avenue is expected to open in fall, 2022.

“While the Tashies are in an expansion mode,” Tashie says, the group decided to take additional space next to the Chickasaw Oaks La Baguette. They leased the boutique next door. “Renovations are under way with plans to connect the space beginning in September. David Tashie is leading  the renovation of the La Baguette expansion.”

And, Judd says, “renovations are well under way” for the new location of Ciao Bella Italian Grill, which will move this fall from 565 Erin Drive to 5100 Sanderlin Avenue in the space that formerly housed Craft Republic and the old Fox and Hound.

Jack Culp and David Tashie at the new Ciao Bella location. (Credit: Judd Tashie)
Bryant’s Breakfast gets bigger. (Credit: Michael Donahue)
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Hungry Memphis

Second La Baguette Location Slated to Open This Year

An additional location of La Baguette French Bread & Pastry Shop is slated to open out East.

The second location will move into the upcoming new home of Ciao Bella Italian Grill – the casual Italian eatery is moving from its former home at 565 Erin Drive to 5101 Sanderlin Avenue, Suite 100, in the Sanderlin Centre – according to Judd Tashie, group co-owner with David Tashie of Tashie Restaurant Group.

 Last March, the group bought the iconic La Baguette at 3088 Poplar Avenue in Chickasaw Oaks Plaza. The bakery/restaurant is open, but currently under renovation.

“That is our plan going forward,” Tashie says. “Basically, it’s about 30 percent of the space of the new Ciao Bella, formerly Fox & Hound/Craft Republic.”

A date for the opening of the new Ciao Bella has not been set, Tashie says. “We’ve taken possession of the space, but we have not really started yet until we get the (original) La Baguette renovation done.”

The new La Baguette location, slated to open in the fourth quarter of 2021, “is going to be a full-fledged La Baguette with storefront and lunch service. It’ll have its own identity and its own entrance and its own patio. We’ll have the same offerings. We’ll have the same menu, the same traditional classic favorites.”

As for more La Baguette locations, Tashie says, “Not at present. It’s always an option.”

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Rembering Phil Bryant: Leave Them Laughing and Well Fed

Like big brothers do, Phil Bryant, former owner of Bryant’s Breakfast, teased his sister, Kerrie Burton, who also was a co-owner. 

He’d jokingly make fun of her, she says. She remembers customers “just cracking up laughing. He was so funny. He was like my dad. He was never going to make you sad. He was going to make you laugh.

“His legacy? My brother was a trip. He was a funny, funny guy.”

 Bryant, 57, died May 31st — Memorial Day — of glioblastoma several months after selling the family restaurant, which is famous for its “Bryant’s Big Breakfast” special — two biscuits, two eggs, grits and gravy on the side, and choice of meat: sausage, bacon, city ham, county ham, beef bologna, and pork tenderloin.    .

Bryant, Burton, and their sister, Sandy Connell, began working at the family restaurant when they were kids. Burton remembers her dad, Jimmy Bryant, who was in the grocery business, telling her mother, Jane, “I’m wanting to either start a nursery or get in the restaurant business.”

“My mom said, ‘Nursery.’ And you know what happened.”

Bryant got a Loeb’s barbecue restaurant franchise around 1969 in Parkway Village at Knight Arnold at Perkins. They sold barbecue and hamburgers until a customer, Dale Crane, who was working in construction in the area, asked her mom, “Would you fix me some breakfast in here? I come in here. I leave the house. I have a hankering for breakfast.”

“And my mother started making breakfast. And this lady named Inez started making it. And some other ladies. My mother started making biscuits right there on Knight Arnold.”

They had to move in the mid ‘70s. “We had to move because they told us they would no longer let us lease there. I don’t know for what reasons.”

Her dad went back into the grocery business, but about a year later they moved to their iconic location at 3965 Summer Avenue at Graham. 

The restaurant was another Loeb’s barbecue at first. But a few years later, Jimmy Bryant took over the restaurant, changed the sign, and it became Bryant’s Breakfast and Bar-B-Q. “The  breakfast just kind of took over, really.

“We sold barbecue after my dad died in 2003. Maybe a year after he died we didn’t do barbecue anymore. We did breakfast. Cut our hours. Did sandwiches. All kinds of sandwiches. We started plate lunches at some time.”

The pandemic changed things. “We closed last year with the COVID and when everything closed. We opened, closed, opened, closed, opened, closed.”

Phil finally decided to sell the restaurant. “He couldn’t write the checks. His right hand wouldn’t work. When he’d walk in the parking lot, he was stumbling on things. His right foot wasn’t lifting up. His tumor was on the left side.”

Selling the restaurant was fine with Burton. “I felt like it was whatever he wanted to do. I knew he didn’t need any of that. Stress. He just needed to think about taking care of himself and getting rid of this cancer. You read about this cancer. There’s nothing good about it at all. It’s a terrible, terrible cancer.”

Bryant let David Pickler’s law firm find a buyer, Burton says. “I remember David Pickler telling me he took his grandchildren to Pink Palace to see Santa Claus. And he said the Santa Claus motioned him over: ‘Come here.’ And he told him, ‘For Christmas, I want you to get Bryant’s breakfast opened back up.’”

Santa was “somebody that knew who he (Pickler) was.”

Bryant’s Breakfast was sold to the Tashie Restaurant Group. The restaurant reopened April 14th. Customers returned to eating Bryant’s biscuits and white gravy, country ham, pork sausage, and other favorite Southern culinary delights.

Her brother teased her, but he also had a gentle side to him. “He loved animals so much. And it was rescues he always took care of.”

He also adopted stray dogs that showed up in the restaurant parking lot. “I know ‘Biscuit’ was one of them.

“He was something else. He really was. He was a great brother, a great boss. He just had a kind heart. He really did. He’ll always be with me.”

In addition to his two sisters, Bryant leaves two sons, Sergei Bryant and Mike Bryant, two nieces, Olivia Burton and Aiden Connell, and two nephews, Reed Burton and Cormac Connell. 

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Bryant’s Breakfast Will Reopen April 14th

You can go back to eating biscuits and white gravy, country ham, pork sausage, and other favorite Southern culinary delights when Bryant’s Breakfast reopens April 14th.

The iconic restaurant at 3965 Summer Avenue was bought by Tashie Restaurant Group.

Is the restaurant going to be different? How has it changed?

“We didn’t do anything except to optimize all the equipment, get all the former staff back, and reprint the menus,” says group co-owner Judd Tashie.  “And that’s about it. To be honest with you, we didn’t have to do much except get all the right people back. That was the key. Same people that were making the food before are doing it again. And the same wait staff, the same people taking care of customers, are back. That was the most important thing. We didn’t change the menu, add anything, or drop anything. We intend to reopen it just as it was.”

Owner Phil Bryant decided to sell the restaurant, which closed last November, Tashie says.

The Tashie group, which recently bought La Baguette French Bread and Pastry Shop, closed on the deal last month, Tashie says.

The restaurant was “clean as a pin” when they bought it, Tashie says. “I’ve been in a lot of restaurants to look at them for purchase or whatever and they’re usually in terrible shape. That’s how it goes. Especially older ones. This one was in tip-top shape.”

Buying Bryant’s was “a great opportunity,” Tashie says. “Because it has a great reputation for great food, great service. It’s a Memphis classic.”

Do they have any plans for the restaurant? “We haven’t secured any more space yet, but I can see additional locations.”

They have no plans to change the restaurant or the menu, says Tashie whose favorite Bryant item is the sausage and egg biscuit. ”Not unless we get requests from customers. Which is something we’re always open to. We’re always open to adding things based on customer demand.”

Richard Lucchesi, 26, who Tashie describes as “a super star,” is the new general manager of Bryant’s Breakfast. For now, Bryant’s will continue to just serve breakfast and lunch. “We’re going to keep the same hours they had before, 5 a.m. to 2 p.m. And we’ll take it from there.”

Maybe Bryant’s dinner someday? “Nothing is out of the question,” Tashie says. “We’re the opportunity business. Nothing is out of the question.”

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Food & Drink Food Reviews Hungry Memphis

A Memphis Jewel: La Baguette Celebrates 45th Anniversary

So, how did La Baguette French Bread and Pastry Shop come to be?

The iconic bakery, recently sold to Tashie Restaurant Group, was the brainchild of Reginald Dalle.

Dalle, who is from near Lille, France, got the idea for the bakery while he and his wife, Teresa, were graduate students at the University of Arizona. A French bakery was located around the corner.

“It’s like a dream for every French person to have a bakery,” Reginald says. “So I was really intrigued. Of course, I started to befriend the owner. He was French, from Paris. He had a bakery there.”

The baker said he’d help Reginald learn the business. “He said, ‘Why don’t you come in nights and I’ll show you the job and we can talk about the machinery and how it works?’”

The Dalles planned to move to Memphis, where Teresa is from. Reginald thought about opening a bakery here if he didn’t land a teaching job. In 1975, Reginald got a job teaching French at Memphis State University, now University of Memphis.

But, Teresa says, Reginald “loved that idea of the bakery. He started getting information on equipment, and he made contacts in Paris.”

The Dalles and their friends Bob and Brenda Cooke, Memphians who were at the University of Arizona when the Dalles were there, formed the group of five people interested in investing in a French bakery. They moved into the current location in Chickasaw Oaks Plaza in 1976.

Some equipment was handmade, including a huge marble-top table, still at the bakery, which was “perfect for making pastries and croissants,” Teresa says. The late Guy Pacaud, a French baker who moved to Memphis, was head baker. “He was the one who started the bread.”

The group chose the name La Baguette. In addition to being the little diamonds on rings, “baguette” is the “famous bread. It just rolled off your tongue.” The French word for bread is “pain,” which didn’t sound like a great name for a bakery, Teresa says.

La Baguette was an instant success. “There was a line out the door. We had no clue it would happen. People were walking out the door with a baguette under their arm for the first time.”

Pacaud brought in a chef and other bakers from Paris, so all the pastries were done by French bakers. “All the recipes were from the number-one bakery in Paris, Lenotre, which is really famous for all its pastries. In order to be true to Lenotre’s recipes, we had to follow exactly the correctness for good pastries. So … natural butter, natural ingredients. Everything was really well studied.”

The pastries included croissants, pain au chocolat, Napoleons, and the still-famous almond croissant. “They take older croissants and put a custard in it. It’s the way French were able to use up croissants that didn’t sell the first day.”

When they opened, there was “no French bread, no baguettes, no authentic pastries” in Memphis, Teresa says. “People are used to it now.”

The bakery became a “cultural phenomenon,” Teresa adds. “We had friends who wanted to come down and work there. They thought it was a privilege to be able to sell some of these goods. It was just a really nice happening at the time. Those first few years were a lot of fun. Then it got to be a lot of work.”

La Baguette opened “satellite stores” in Memphis. The bakery also began serving soups and sandwiches.

Reginald taught French and Teresa taught in the English department at Memphis State. In the early ’80s, Reginald took a job teaching French at Memphis University School, where he stayed for 30 years. “He loved the school and realized his true vocation was teaching.”

The Dalles sold their share of La Baguette in the mid-’80s. Paul Howse, an investor, became sole owner in 1987.

“We really felt like we left an institution,” Teresa says. “I felt like we left something good for Memphis.”

La Baguette is at 3088 Poplar Avenue in Chickasaw Oaks Plaza.