Josh and Emily Mutchnick (Photos: Michael Donahue)

Josh and Emily Mutchnick have arrived.

โ€œItโ€™s been a long road,โ€ he says. โ€œThis is my dream becoming fulfilled.โ€

The dream is JEM, a dream of a restaurant that opens April 25th in the Edge District. Josh and his wife, Emily, are owners of the roughly 3,500-square-foot restaurant at 644 Madison Avenue. โ€œSheโ€™s doing the back-end paperwork and all the fun stuff. Every aspect of it. And Iโ€™m doing the cheffy stuff,โ€ Josh says.

โ€œJEMโ€ stands for โ€œJosh (and) Emily Mutchnick.โ€ It also stands for โ€œJust Enjoy the Moment.โ€

โ€œThis is our restaurant and this is our food. This is our personality. This is it.โ€

Mutchnick, 37, was in the sixth grade in Mobile, Alabama, when he realized he wanted to be a chef.

A graduate of the Culinary Institute of America, Mutchnick worked at several prestigious restaurants, including Chicagoโ€™s Michelin-starred EL Ideas, where he was chef de cuisine.

When they decided to relocate in 2020, Josh and Emily ended up in Memphis, where his sister had gone to Rhodes College.

Josh was doing his monthly JEM Dining Supper Club dinners at the James Lee House in Victorian Village when he and Emily decided the time was right to โ€œjump full inโ€ and open their restaurant. โ€œIn the middle of 2022 was when I had my business plan and talked with the real estate broker and bank.โ€

His broker โ€œfound this gem in the Edge District.โ€

Josh kept the ball rolling. โ€œI met with a lot of restaurant-style business owners. They gave me a lot of advice.โ€

John Halford and Patrick Brown with cnct. design, pllc, designed the space for the Mutchnicks. The ceiling features exposed beams and rusty tin. They kept the original concrete floor, which they covered with a clear seal. The โ€œcracks and paint spots add a lot of personality and texture to the place.โ€

โ€œThis is an old building and we want to keep some of the personality,โ€ he says.

But the old is juxtaposed with โ€œsome modern lighting, a lot of wood finishes, and a lot of warm colors that are going to add depth to it.โ€

โ€œYou come in and you want to snuggle up in the space with all this wood and rusty color and beauty.โ€

He adds, โ€œItโ€™s a completely open kitchen. You come in and see all the action. We have a kitchen counter, but every seat you get to see the kitchen in action. And, if you want, you can come up and talk to us.

โ€œI think the main goal of this restaurant is to have an experience that is welcoming and shows hospitality through the food, physically through the space, but also through the service.โ€

They want JEM to be a place โ€œwhere people come in and have exciting, delicious food, but feel welcome and relaxed.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™re surrounded by a passionate staff that feels like we do. We want to show you a great time and make you feel right at home while serving you the best food and cocktails and wine that we can.โ€

So, what will Josh be cooking in that open kitchen? โ€œShort answer is: modern American with global influences.

โ€œLong answer: Iโ€™ve been cooking and working towards this my whole life. And Iโ€™ve always expressed myself through food. I know I can make the best food when Iโ€™m excited about the techniques and can put new and different things on the menu.โ€

Whether thatโ€™s โ€œAsian, European, or American influences,โ€ Josh says, โ€œitโ€™s going to be delicious.โ€

Describing one of his dishes, Josh says, โ€œIโ€™m taking traditional Italian arancini, but using Korean flavors by adding kimchi, scallions, and cilantro to it. Then serving it with charred scallion tofu aioli and pickled daikon radish.โ€

And, he says, โ€œOne of the coolest things is, itโ€™s completely vegan.โ€

All their desserts are homemade. One was inspired by Waffle House pecan waffles, Josh says. Itโ€™s a โ€œdecadent waffle mousse with a maple gel, candied pecans, and a pecan cake base.โ€

He and Emily believe JEM is in the right spot. โ€œMoving to Memphis, from day one we had our eye on the Edge District,โ€ Josh says, adding, โ€œItโ€™s an up-and-coming neighborhood. Weโ€™re just out of Downtown. I think the location is perfect. Near Downtown and near Midtown.โ€

All the business owners in the neighborhood are trying to โ€œbuild up this community,โ€ he says. โ€œAnd we want to be part of that energy and that action.โ€

Their neighbors include the new Rockโ€™n Dough Pizza & Brewery as well as Inkwell and Sun Studio. โ€œThis community is about to explode. I love 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...