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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Local on the Square Closing, Madison Tavern Moving in

Local on the Square will close Saturday, October 28th, and Madison Tavern will take over the space at 2126 Madison Avenue in November.

“We’re hoping to be open — if dreams come true — for Thanksgiving,” says Tim Quinn. He and his wife Tarrah are the new owners. “Probably a couple of weeks afterward if things don’t go perfectly.”

Describing Madison Tavern, Tim, who also owns Local on Main Street with his wife, says, “It will be a neighborhood place. I want it to be a nice spot — something that can be for a nice occasion to go out, but also casual enough to go to every day if you live in the neighborhood or nearby.”

He doesn’t want to compare Madison Tavern to Local on the Square, which he describes as “iconic,” but he wants to keep that same “cool atmosphere. We’re trying to create that same feel where people can come in and they’re comfortable and just hang out.”

Tim wants it to be the place where people can go if they’re planning to stay for dinner or drinks or go somewhere else before or after. If they’re not staying for dinner, they can get drinks before going across the street to dinner at Porch and Parlor or to see a show at Lafayette’s Music Room, he says.

As for Madison Tavern’s fare, Tim says, “I want to try to keep a fairly small menu. Some burgers. Some sandwiches. Some nice dinner plates. As much of it from scratch as possible. Locally sourced whenever we can. Downtown, we put some hydroponic towers in. We’re growing our own herbs.”

He plans to “offer some strong seafood” items, including catfish, which has been a “huge thing” at Local on Main Street.

Tim also wants to include beef. “I’m sure a beef tenderloin. Or a filet. But big steaks don’t tend to go over. People come in, they’re wanting to get a nice meal, willing to spend money, but they want to be in and out in 30 minutes: ‘I’ve got a show to see.’”

Madison Tavern will offer specials, which will depend on what is locally sourced that week. “We want to have a solid menu. A couple of daily specials.”

They will be open for dinner only around 3 p.m. during the first week, Tim says. “We want to catch that happy hour crowd. We’ll have nice happy hour specials. Small plates.”

He plans to stay open until 1am on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays, but “be out of there by midnight” the rest of the week.

And he wants to have “a very welcoming atmosphere and specials” for service industry people who want to grab some food and drinks when they get off work. He wants to “keep those guys happy. They work hard.”

As for the decor, Tim says he wants Madison Avenue to have “a lodge feeling. There will be some stained glass chandeliers. I want to put some copper, tin tiles on the ceiling. Change the colors of the booths, the walls. Some hunter greens and burgundies. Then some blues. A couple of different neutral colors. Anything we can change, we’re going to change. We want it to be obvious that somebody’s come in and done something different.”

The Quinns also owned Memphis Clover Club, but Tim says, “The lease came up to be signed. I wasn’t willing to commit that much longer. I dropped out of that lease. I closed that one down at the beginning of last week.”

Local on the Square opened October 2012, says owner Jeff Johnson, who now lives in Santa Rosa, Florida. “We had a great run and enjoyed it,” he says. “But part of it was not living in town anymore. And trying to manage it from afar. It wasn’t what I wanted to continue to do. I’ve got some other business interests I’m concentrating on.

“I’ve had a lovely time in the 30 years I’ve been in the restaurant business in some capacity. Maybe one day down there in Florida or another town, I’d like to get into it again. Right now in my life I’m concentrating on real estate development and short-term rentals. Which is where I’d like to concentrate my efforts.”

He’s not disappearing from Memphis, though. “I still have a home in Memphis. I’m not going to be a stranger, by any means. And if Tim needs any advice along the way, I’ll offer that, too.”

And, Johnson says, “I think he’s going to do well.”

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Lucky Clover: Tim Quinn Doubled Down Downtown

You might remember Tim Quinn when he was a server at Pete & Sam’s. Or maybe when he was waiting tables at Perkins Restaurant & Bakery. Or Molly’s La Casita.

Well, he now owns two restaurants: Memphis Clover Club at Hotel Indigo and Local on Main Street. He bought both of them in 2021.

“I wanted to own a restaurant and a bar by the time I was 35,” says Quinn, 39. “I figured I was four years late and I had to double up one year.”

He took over the lease of Local from Jeff Johnson, who still owns Local on the Square. Quinn put in a downstairs bar and plans on doing “a rebrand at some time,” but, he says, “It was already an existing business. It had been there almost 15 years, going well, made money. I didn’t have to change much at all.”

Quinn overheard Indigo’s manager and the former manager of the hotel’s restaurant/bar talking one afternoon at Local. “I heard them say they needed someone to fill the spot where 3rd & Court had been.” After looking at the place, Quinn said, “I’m sold. I can definitely do something with this.”

The manager didn’t want the new place to look like a diner, but he wanted “something retro, mid-century, ’50s, ’60s, ’70s to go along with the theme of the hotel.”

Quinn was surprised to discover the basement area, which had been The Lounge and, earlier, Memphis Sounds: “Holy shit! There’s a whole other place down there!”

Quinn, his wife Tarrah, and his brother Jason Quinn went into partnership.

Memphis Clover Club, which opened October 8th, focuses on craft cocktails, particularly gin drinks. The food is “from all over the world. Different street foods or small plates you might see Downtown in large cities where you’re grabbing a bite to eat.

“We cut our own fries and all that stuff. As much as we can, everything is from scratch. We don’t order anything in a number 10 can. We make our own sauces, all our syrups for the bar.”

They feature live music upstairs and downstairs. The decor still has “that same retro feel. Just a different color scheme, different furniture.” Quinn’s using a “burnt orange,” which he describes as “almost reminiscent of the GE appliance color,” and a turquoise “like you would have seen in the interior of a car in the ’70s.”

Quinn began working in restaurants in high school when he realized Jason, who was working at a Perkins, made more money than he did. “He was making as much on a Sunday morning as I was making in an entire week working at Blockbuster.”

He got a job waiting tables at Perkins, but a week later he began cooking.

Three years later, Quinn went to work at the old Pete & Sam’s on Appling Road and, later, at the Park location. He also worked at Molly’s La Casita, Club 152, and TJ Mulligans, where he met his wife. And he worked for a brief time for Steve Cooper at the old City Hall nightspot in Cordova. In late 2017, Johnson asked Quinn to manage Local on the Square.

Quinn took over the lease of the Downtown Local in January 2021. “A blizzard hit the week after we bought it and all the places Downtown started closing and all the water pipes started busting. We bought that thing at the worst time possible. My wife and I had to stay at a hotel for a week so we could make it to work ’cause the roads weren’t predictable.”

He spent his free time helping people whose cars were stranded in the snow and ice. “I took my four-wheeler Downtown with an axe and a shovel and pulled them out when they were stuck and handed them business cards.”

Quinn told them, “I’m the new guy at Local. Come and have a drink.”

Memphis Clover Club is at 24 N. B.B. King; Local on Main Street is at 95 S. Main.