If you missed the Memphis Food and Wine Festival last October, you could get a taste of what you missed at the Lifedoc Health โHealthier Memphis Gala,โ held March 23rd at 409 South Main Street.

Chefs who participated in the earlier festival at Memphis Botanic Garden โ along with others โ took part in last week’s gala. In addition to great food, lots of great people were on hand.
Jose Gutierrez, chef/owner of River Oaks restaurant as well as Memphis Food and Wine Festival co-founder, was instrumental in gathering chefs for the event.

David and Amanda Krog and their daughter, Doris, manned the Dory restaurant booth, where they served braised short ribs with aerated potato, chicken demi glace, fried shallots, and thyme. It was delicious.

Ditto for the caramelized salmon with cauliflower from Emily LaForce at the River Oaks station.

And more ditto for Ryan Trimmโs lobster bruschetta with fennel, dill, lemon honey, and pistachio. Trimm is owner of 117 Prime and Sunrise Memphis.

Well, actually, ditto for everything I ate. Including a special ditto for Franck Oyselโs black forest cake with vanilla bean, chantilly, griottes, and chocolate mousse. I ate two or three of those. Oysel is with the Flight Restaurant Group.

The gala also included a live auction, which featured suite seats for the Memphis Grizzlies/Orlando Magic game on March 28th, rare cigars, a wine tasting, and a piece of artwork from LaForce, who is a visual artist as well as a chef.
Other artwork included a custom piece from Gabriel Velasquez.
Gabeโs 18-month-old son, Chet, did the bidding for his dad on a custom-tailored Ermenegilda Zegna suit from Oak Hall. Gabe got the suit.

Terri Walker was auctioneer.
Lifedoc Health came about after Gabeโs brother, Pedro Velasquez Jr. was diagnosed with leukemia more than 20 years ago. Their parents, Drs. Pedro and Astrid Velasquez, who had just completed their fellowships at Harvard Medical School, moved to Memphis from Caracas, Venezuela, to put Pedro Jr. in St. Jude. According to the event program, they โmade a plea to God that their son be spared. One year later, these prayers were answered, as Pedro Jr. made an unbelievable recovery and entered his second remission.โ
Pedro โmade an enduring commitment to the city that granted his son a second chance.โ
โWhat started as a weekly, single-room clinic, seeing only 19 patients a month at UTโs College of Nursing is now among Tennesseeโs largest private practices in terms of patient volume. Since transitioning to a non-profit in 2020, Lifedoc has made great strides in its mission to build healthier communities, with Pedro Jr. as its executive director.โ

The gala โcouldnโt have been better,โ Gabe says. โEverything was beautiful. Looked well done. The food was off the charts.โ
The event raised $180,000 to help build a new multi-speciality outpatient facility to focus on diabetes and obesity in East Memphis. โIt was a good night,โ Gabe says.
The last part of Pedro Jr.โs speech got to him, Gabe says. โWhere he said, โWeโve taken a page out of St. Judeโs model, striving to cure diabetes through prevention in Memphis, then in the state of Tennessee, then to the nation, and then hopefully the world.โ It had me fired up.โ
In addition to helping their patients, they also want to โhelp pave the way for what others do,โ Pedro Jr. says. “Like St. Jude. By helping our patients, we can find out what works. That way we can help other clinics and organizations around the world. St. Jude Childrenโs Research Hospital helps thousands of patients every year, but impacts millions across the world through the protocols that they share.โ
The Soul Shockers performed.












