Scott Hellen, Luis Briones, Spencer Hays, Tyson Stack, and Kelvin Ferguson (Photo: Michael Donahue)

You might want to bring a white tablecloth when you visit High Point Pizza on Thursday nights.

Thatโ€™s when you can get the โ€œThursday Night Entree Feature,โ€ which includes โ€œeverything from stuffed pork chops to filet to snapper,โ€ says owner Spencer Hays, 52.

This began about two years ago. โ€œOn Tuesdays we started doing homemade mozzarella sticks. On Wednesdays, we do hot wings. I was just trying to come up with something for Thursdays. Weekdays are usually a little slower.

โ€œI was thinking about doing handmade pasta dishes like spaghetti, fettuccine. That quickly turned into doing a pasta special. Then I realized I had such talent in my kitchen, it didnโ€™t have to be just pasta.โ€

Hays โ€œtook the reins off the talentโ€ and said, โ€œWhatever you want to do. Letโ€™s just make it happen.โ€

His crew, including chefs Luis Briones and Kelvin Ferguson, manager Scott Hellen, and front man Tyson Stack, rose to the occasion. โ€œIโ€™ve had the same core group of guys for over five years. And they have different backgrounds. Some of them worked in the finer restaurants in the city. And I just said, โ€˜Go for it.โ€™ And they started coming up with the most beautiful things.

โ€œIt gets redundant just making pizza and the same thing all the time.โ€

One of 40 entrees is served each Thursday beginning at 5 p.m. Sides include โ€œturnip greens or garlic mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes, or shrimp risotto. The knowledge of my crew in the back is extensive. Itโ€™s their time to get creative, and they relish it,โ€ Hays says.

His idea worked. โ€œPretty much every day is busy now. So now, weโ€™re sitting here enjoying what weโ€™re doing and just trying to keep up. [The restaurant] turned 15 years old in May.โ€

A native Memphian, Hays was co-owner of Movie & Pizza Co. in Harbor Town. He frequented the coffee shop that used to be in High Point Pizzaโ€™s space. One day he noticed a โ€œFor Leaseโ€ sign.

Opening a restaurant in the High Point Terrace shopping center was a no-brainer. โ€œItโ€™s kind of a hidden gem in that neighborhood. The customers, the people that live there, are amazing. Theyโ€™re huge supporters of what we do. They walk with their strollers, their dogs, their wagons.โ€

Hays added tables outside. โ€œI give kids little pieces of raw dough to play with. That gives them something to do.โ€

Becoming a restaurateur wasnโ€™t his first career choice. โ€œI was going to be a psychologist. I lasted about two years. And then the money ran out and I had to start working.โ€

His first restaurant job when he was 15 was โ€œbasically, taking the trash out of the Burger King. The most glamorous job you could ever have.โ€

He went on to bartend and wait tables at Benniganโ€™s. He also worked in management at the old Pig-N-Whistle on Winchester and as a cook at Garibaldiโ€™s Pizza. โ€œThatโ€™s where I first put a pizza together.โ€

As for his pizzas, Hays, who also works in the kitchen, says, โ€œI just use the best ingredients possible.

โ€œItโ€™s the quality of the product and cooking it. We have a brick oven we use.โ€ The pizzas are โ€œnice and crisp on the bottom. The toppings are great.โ€

They make about a dozen different pizzas, but the simple cheese pizza and the pepperoni are the biggest sellers. They also do a barbecue pizza with house-made barbecue.

The menu features other items, including the popular muffuletta on homemade bread and a Cuban sandwich, in addition to lasagna, spaghetti and meatballs, and mozzarella sticks. โ€œWe have a decent big menu, but Iโ€™m of the opinion that too many menu items lessens the quality overall. So I try to keep it pretty simple.โ€

As for franchising High Point Pizza, Hays says, โ€œI looked at maybe doing another location. Never say never. But right now, Iโ€™m content with what I have.โ€

High Point Pizza is at 477 High Point Terrace; (901) 452-3339.

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...