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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Chef Flavas Dip Hits Walmart

Look for Chef Flavas spinach artichoke dip at Walmart stores October 22nd.

That’s the dip created by chef Chris Moore, who, along with his wife chef Regina Moore, is the owner of Chef Flavas.

“We won out of 13,000 companies on an open-call invitation,” Chris says. Out of that 13,000, 11,000 were “invited to the event to pitch their product. There were maybe 330 companies that ended up getting the golden ticket to get inside Walmart.”

That was last June. In October, their dip will go into stores for a test launch in Memphis. If that goes well, after three months Walmart will try to put it in stores regionally.

Tim Stachowiak, vice president of sales for Phoenix, Arizona-based Next Phase Enterprises, which works with Walmart and Sam’s Club, is a fan. “I’m not a foodie,” he says. “I don’t get wowed by a lot. But my initial reaction was, ‘That’s the best spinach artichoke dip I’ve ever had at retail. If not the best, the second-best I’ve had at a restaurant.’”

Chris’ mom, the late Valerie Hall, taught him how to make the dip. “I took it and put my own little spins on it,” he says.

The dip, which he describes as “creamy, tangy, garlicky, and cheesy,” can be used in many dishes. “Our motto is ‘Unlock the inner chef in you.’ You can make stuffed salmon, stuffed chicken, oysters Rockefeller, put it in pastas, and spread it on top of your steak. It’s an aid for people in their kitchen, so they can have guaranteed ‘flava’ when they make meals.”

His mom was instrumental in his career path, Chris says. “I was always up under my mom when she was in the kitchen.”

His mother was a caterer, and his father owned a restaurant. Chris used to pretend to cook. He turned the family pool table into a “hibachi grill,” he says. “I’d take pool balls and put them on the plate and serve them to my brother.”

His mother let him try his hand in the kitchen when he was 11. “She allowed me to cook peas and carrots. That’s the first thing I ever made. It was the best peas and carrots I’ve ever made in my whole life.”

As for cooking, Chris says, “That’s the only career path I ever wanted to do.”

The couple met at L’Ecole Culinaire culinary school in Memphis and went into business together after they graduated. “We started out selling dinners out of our two-bedroom apartment,” Regina says.

They opened a restaurant, Moore Food Catering, but they weren’t experienced enough to own a restaurant, Chris says.

He worked at various restaurants, including the Atlantic Restaurant in Edgartown, Massachusetts, where he cooked for Michelle and President Barack Obama.“It was just so surreal for me. I had ‘cooking for the Obamas’ on my bucket list since 2008 when he got into office.”

In 2017, Chris made it to the second round of the Chopped “Squab Goals” episode on Food Network. He had to create a meal out of “mystery basket” ingredients in 15 minutes.

Regina came up with the idea for Hemp Flavas, their line of CBD-infused condiments. After she made a CBD-flavored cake, Chris thought it needed something else. “I felt it was a little dry. I took the CBD oil and made a sauce with it and poured it on top of the cake and it turned out phenomenal.”

That led to more CBD-infused products. But they also wanted to come up with products for people who didn’t like CBD-infused food. That’s when they came up with Chef Flavas, which also includes egg rolls, three types of pastas, and a frozen Alfredo sauce.

The couple now work out of OtherFoods Kitchen, but they’re currently looking at buildings for their Chef Flava restaurant, which they want to turn into a franchise.

It will be Italian fusion, including a variety of pastas. Chris says, “I love Italian food.”

Chris and Regina make a good team. “I’m the chef. She’s the ‘flava.’ She makes all the stuff pop. I’ll create and she’ll make it marketable so people know about it.”

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

Turn and Face the Change

It’s Saturday afternoon and my wife is making a pie crust, not a particularly regular occurrence, since she’s a busy professional lawyer-type person and I’m a work-at-home schlub who ends up doing most of the cooking these days. I am smart enough, however, not to offer advice on pie-crust-making.

As we chat, Tatine pulls a box of parchment paper out of the drawer where all the stuff in long, rectangular boxes goes: foil, plastic wrap, wax paper. You know. We all have one of those drawers.

“We’re almost out of parchment paper,” she says. “And it looks like we’re also really low on plastic freezer bags.”

Bruce VanWyngarden

“Okay.”

I pull out my phone and tap it a few times.

“It’ll get here Monday,” I say.

The transaction happens almost without thinking. A year ago, I would have added “freezer bags” and “parchment paper” to the standing grocery list on my phone. Five years ago, I would have added the items to a grocery list stuck on the fridge with a magnet. No more. After 11 months of COVID-19, I just order that crap instantly. I’ve got priorities, after all. I’m not gonna shower and put on hard pants and real shoes and mask up and get in my car and risk my life for a roll of parchment paper. No sir, buddy.

On Monday, a package will appear on my porch, and it’s likely I’ll have no idea what it is until I open it and discover — whee! — parchment paper and freezer bags! Or it might be fire starters for the fireplace or three new black T-shirts or a cool new meat thermometer that I convinced myself I needed late one night. Who knows? Santa comes all year now!

Sometimes change happens and it takes us awhile to realize it. Now, while we all jockey for position and wait and hope for a vaccine dose, it might be a good exercise to consider just how much the pandemic has changed us, and how much of that change might linger after COVID is just a bad memory that arises when you find a mask in a coat pocket a year from now.

I look forward to wandering through a bookstore, lingering in a coffee shop, sitting in a restaurant over a good meal, going to a concert, strolling through a museum, flying on an airplane, drinking a cold local brew at a bar where everybody knows my name. I might even miss going to the office. Sort of. Those things will come back into my life and I will welcome them.

But I think many of us, including me, will continue to order the mundane stuff we used to drive around and pick up. Not fun shopping, mind you, but yeah, parchment paper, plastic bags, vitamins — that stuff? Just drop it off on the porch, please. Thanks.

Have COVID and Amazon and Uber Eats and other delivery services transformed our urban way of shopping in a manner similar to how Walmart transformed rural America’s way of shopping? I don’t know. I read an essay this week called “Rural Doom,” by Evan Charles Wolf. I recommend it to you. It is the best analysis I’ve seen yet on the country’s now-massive rural/urban divide. Wolf acknowledges how Walmart (and globalization) deconstructed the economies of rural and small-town America, but takes it a step further, into the political ramifications.

As the factories left and small businesses died and the towns shrunk, our cities and suburbs absorbed more people — and gained more votes and more power. Joe Biden took the presidency handily in 2020 — in the popular vote and Electoral College — and yet won majorities in only 16 percent of the nation’s counties! Population density was the single most important factor in determining who won the election. The lesson: Win the cities and suburbs and you win the presidency. Walmart didn’t just transform a way of life; it transformed our electoral politics.

Will COVID leave a similar mark? Time will tell.

• Readers of the print edition of the Flyer will no doubt have noticed that the paper is a different shape — slightly wider and a bit shorter. That’s because the printer we’ve used for many years was recently shut down. We’ve found a new printer, but it was necessary to conform to a new shape. Same Flyer, same content, just a new package. We think it’s pretty snazzy.

Categories
News News Blog

COVID-19 Vaccines to be Dispensed at Memphis Area Walmart Stores

Walmart

Memphis-area Walmart stores will soon provide COVID-19 vaccines.

Walmart will soon administer COVID-19 vaccines in the Memphis area.

The retailer was chosen here and could begin giving the shots her next week, according to a story in The Daily Memphian. That story says, however, that the date for the Walmart rollout has not yet been confirmed.

But here are the eleven Memphis-area locations approved to give the shots:

Walmart has been gearing up to provide the shot over the past year, the retailer says on its website. At full capacity, Walmart and Sam’s Club stores could deliver 10 million-13 million doses every month.  

“As we look to a future when supply can meet demand and more people are eligible to receive the vaccine, we plan to offer the vaccine seven days a week at our pharmacies, through planned in-store vaccination clinics and through large community events,” reads a news release on the store’s website.

The retailer has been training “thousands” of pharmacists and pharmacy techs, building a new digital scheduling tool, and partnering with state and federal agencies on allocations.

“At full capacity, we expect we will be able to deliver 10 million-13 million doses per month when supply and allocations allow,” reads the site.

Here is a list of all Tennessee pharmacies approved so far to give the COVID-19 vaccine:
[pdf-1]

Categories
News The Fly-By

Fly on the Wall 1368

Mississippi, Our Neighbor

Who has the best nickname in Mississippi politics this year? I’ll give you a hint. It’s not Cleotra “Popsickle” Tanner, who’s running for Humphreys County Supervisor. And it’s not Bolivar County Constable hopeful Johnny “8-Ball” Harris either. The number-one nicknamed candidate in Mississippi politics this election season has to be John “Cheese Burger” Jones, who’s running for Constable in Tallahatchie County. McDonaldland experts agree that, if elected, Constable Cheese Burger will prove to be no match for the mumbling arch-fiend known as Hamburgler.

Cash Money

File under cool things: A grassroots effort is currently underway to place a bronze statue of Johnny Cash at the intersection of Cooper and Walker where Memphis music legend Cash and the Tennessee Two played their first show at Galloway United Methodist Church. Mississippi sculptor Bill Beckwith has been tapped to make the piece. Beckwith has previously created major works honoring Elvis Presley, William Faulkner, B.B. King, and Kermit the Frog. If funded, the sculpture will be unveiled May 1, 2016, the 60th anniversary of Cash’s “I Walk the Line.” Fund-raising on ioby for the first phase of the project has been extended through midnight, Friday, May 15th.

Neverending Elvis

While shopping in a Nashville Walmart last week, your Pesky Fly stumbled onto this “Fat Elvis” piggy bank. Taking Care of Bacon!

Categories
News News Blog

Local Nonprofit Competes To Get Shoe On Walmart’s Shelves

globalshoe.png

Local nonprofit, SoGiv, has submitted its Global Awareness shoe into Walmart’s 2013 “Get on the Shelf” contest. The contest allows entrepreneurs around the country to submit their products for a chance to be sold on Walmart’s website and potentially have them sold in select stores.

SoGiv’s “Global Awareness” shoe is a black athletic sneaker with streaks of red and a gray SoGiv logo, which has the seven continents embedded in it.

“Should we win, not only would it be a good look for Memphis, but it would allow people all over the world to buy that shoe at Walmart.com,” said Edward Bogard, founder of SoGiv and designer of the shoe. “A lot of people don’t know that it’s not camouflage [but] all seven continents on the shoe. It helps kids learn their seven continents a little bit faster. It’s more than a fashion statement.”

People can vote for SoGiv’s Global Awareness shoe once a day up until Sept. 2nd here. A portion of the proceeds from every shoe purchased will go to one of 16 different charities and causes that SoGiv supports. These include HIV/AIDS, obesity, cancer, mental illness, and homelessness.

Bogard, a philanthropic designer, founded SoGiv in 2009 with the mission to raise global awareness and proceeds for worthy causes in the Mid-South and around the world.