Emily LaForce (Photo: Michael Donahue)

When Ben Smith, chef/owner of Tsunami, asked Emily LaForce to come cook, she couldโ€™ve said, โ€œMay LaForce be with you.โ€

LaForce, 35, who began working at Tsunami in Cooper-Young about two months ago, is also a force of nature. She hasnโ€™t let anything stand in the way of expressing her creativity, whether itโ€™s cooking or painting.

Art was first. She has a picture her mother gave her when she was 3 years old. Itโ€™s a โ€œlittle picture of somebody painting on an easel,โ€ she says. And on it LaForce wrote, โ€œI want to be an โ€˜ardes.โ€™โ€

LaForce was about 13 when she began looking at food in a new light. Her mother showed her how to make crรจme brรปlรฉe. โ€œI was like, โ€˜What is that?โ€™ We grew up with Southern food.โ€ Not long after, LaForce successfully cooked salmon after watching a TV cooking show demonstration.

At 16, LaForce got a job as a dishwasher at New York Pizza Cafe in Bartlett. The owner taught her how to make sauce and dough and how to throw pizzas using a kitchen towel. She later worked at another pizza parlor, but, she says, โ€œThis is the only job I was really fired from.

โ€œIt was a rainy Sunday. We were bored. One of my managers was like, โ€˜Do something to make me laugh.โ€™โ€ LaForce made a little sculpture out of dough scraps. โ€œI made it look like Wendy from the Wendyโ€™s restaurant. But then it was R-rated. It involved a sausage and two meatballs.โ€

She posted a photo of it on Facebook, thinking she shared it on a private group page that included the restaurantโ€™s name. But LaForce accidentally posted it on the restaurantโ€™s corporate page. She was fired from the pizza restaurant and was banned from working at any of the other restaurants in the chain โ€œin America.โ€

LaForce moved on. She learned how to make hibachi and sushi at the old Rain restaurant. She continued to honing her skills as a student at Bethel University in McKenzie, Tennessee, where she worked at The Grill at school and another pizza parlor. She continued to paint, but her style changed. โ€œI started doing a bunch of acid and it started changing after that.โ€

โ€œI started doing just whatever people wanted at the time because I needed money. So I would just do commissions and murals. I painted the gas pump at the gas station in McKenzie.โ€

After graduating with an English degree, LaForce returned to Memphis.

In 2013, she set up a booth with her original paintings and prints at Cooper-Young Festival. Business wasnโ€™t so good until LaForce found a way to get noticed. โ€œThis guy dressed as a banana was walking around and handing out condoms to people.โ€ LaForce, who brought a cooler of beer with her, told him, โ€œIโ€™ll give you beer all day long, as much as you want, as long as you stay around my booth.โ€

โ€œBecause he was attracting attention,โ€ she says, โ€œI ended up making double what I was selling it for because of this banana.โ€ 

LaForce also worked for a time on two different pot farms. Her job at one was โ€œkeeping the goats from eating the weed.โ€

She got into cooking big time after moving back to Memphis in 2014 working with chef Kelly English when he was at The 5 Spot at Earnestine & Hazelโ€™s. โ€œIt was the first time I really got my eyes opened to different kinds of foods, like a real chef.โ€

There, she met Majestic Grille owners Patrick and Deni Reilly and eventually landed a job at Majestic Grille โ€” another eye-opener. โ€œI knew basic stuff, but I didnโ€™t know the proper way to do things.โ€

Two years later, LaForce went to chef/owner Josรฉ Gutierrezโ€™s River Oaks Restaurant. She was there seven years. โ€œI started as a line cook and left as chef de cuisine.โ€

LaForce and her wife Ashley ate at Tsunami after Smith offered her a job. When he paid for their dinner, Ashley told Emily, โ€œWhen a chef does that, thatโ€™s a good sign.โ€

Emily is impressed with Smith. โ€œHis flavors are very different from anything Iโ€™ve experienced. Itโ€™s like a perfect balance.โ€ And, she says, โ€œHeโ€™s badass.โ€

Asked her long-range goal, Emily says, โ€œTo be an artist.โ€ Emily, whose murals grace Saltwater Crab and Meddlesome Brewing Company, wants to have an art show titled โ€œBack of House,โ€ which will be โ€œpaintings of things you donโ€™t normally see in restaurants. Just in the back of the house. Just the crazy shit that happens. The beautiful things, but also the horrifying things.โ€

Mostly, Emily says, โ€œI want to show the beauty of it.โ€ 

Michael Donahue began his career in 1975 at the now-defunct Memphis Press-Scimitar and moved to The Commercial Appeal in 1984, where he wrote about food and dining, music, and covered social events until...