Josh McLane of stand-up comedy, music, and culinary fame, will open a sandwich shop at the upcoming South Point Grocery. (Credit: Josh McLane)

Josh McLane โ€” of stand-up comedy, music, and culinary fame โ€” will open a sandwich shop this winter in the upcoming South Point Grocery Store.

Taylor James, son of Cash Saver and High Point Grocery owner Rick James, approached him about opening a sandwich shop, according to McLane, 41. โ€œThey’re opening another grocery store downtown, South Point Grocery Store,โ€ he says.  โ€œAnd inside there Iโ€™m going to be opening a sandwich shop. They called me. And said they had an idea. They wanted to put a small, no BS, something-different-kind-of-sandwich place in it. And my name got thrown in the hat.โ€

McLane, who will run the sandwich shop himself, says James knew him from when he worked at the Hi Tone kitchen. โ€œI was running the kitchen at the old location. I had six or seven sandwiches in that. I got known for pulling stuff out of thin air.โ€

Like vegetarian sandwiches. โ€œMy wife is a vegetarian. I got creative after eight weeks of doing that. I wanted to make sure she had a decent variety of things to eat. By proxy, I had a decent vegetarian menu.โ€

His HEELS sandwich, named after the band consisting of himself and Brennan Whalen, is how he โ€œgot known as a sandwich guy.โ€

The HEELS sandwich is composed of spicy peanut butter, jalapeรฑo strawberry jam, bacon, and provolone cheese. โ€œSomething Iโ€™ve eaten my whole life. Being a blue collar kid, Iโ€™ve eaten PBJ forever. Youโ€™d add another fancier element to it. When I was at Finoโ€™s [on the Hill] I started taking provolone home. Thatโ€™s how that came together.โ€

McLane began cooking when he was a child. โ€œIt was very important for both of my parents that I knew how to cook a meal for myself. Theyโ€™re both big cooks themselves. My mom was showing me her spaghetti sauce when I was like 5 years old. And, to this day, thatโ€™s how I make my spaghetti sauce. My dad is a life-long hunter, so I knew how to do that stuff.

โ€œI went to culinary school instead of college. A place not here any more. It was more like a course. This was like 2005, at a house over on Central and Peabody. I did the usual Dominoโ€™s when I was in my twenties. Iโ€™ve been cooking my whole life. I cooked when I was at the P&H, Finoโ€™s, and, after I left Finoโ€™s, I opened the Hi Tone kitchen. That was all me. [Brian] Skinny [McCabe] helped me come up with things on the menu, but that was my whole deal, my business to run. And then I was the prep guy at Little Italy Downtown for a year.โ€

Recently, McLane has been a โ€œstay-at-home dadโ€ to his and his wife, Caraโ€™s, eight-month-old son, Gideon.

McLane describes himself as a โ€œwhateverโ€™s in the fridgeโ€ type of chef. โ€œA lot of chefs are good at taking an expensive piece of meat and elevating it into something and not messing it up.โ€

McLane can take whatever he already has around โ€œand make it awesome. I am going to blow your minds with what we have in the fridge.โ€

As for sandwiches at the upcoming shop, McLane says, โ€œWeโ€™ll definitely have a Reuben on it. Plan on having my garlic bread, pesto garlic butter, and mozzarella cheese. Iโ€™m sure a club sandwich with deli meats. And a good vegetarian one that I had at the Hi Tone โ€” the Care Package โ€” with olive tapenade, lettuce, tomato, two kinds of cheese, and marinated mushrooms.โ€

He plans to call the sandwich shop โ€œSouth Point Kitchen.โ€ โ€œโ€˜Cause I donโ€™t do fancy names. I think they were expecting something clever. Thatโ€™s what you get when I do music and stand up. When I work-work itโ€™s very easy, simple. I donโ€™t like coming up with wacky titles like people expect.โ€

McLane named that sandwich HEELS โ€œto market the band at the same time.โ€

He will have his own โ€œlittle area at the side of this grocery store. Weโ€™ll have a deli counter, too, with all kinds of meats. A little refrigerated section next to the deli with all kinds of local foods.โ€

McLane usually wears a suit and tie when doing stand up and jeans and T-shirts when heโ€™s doing music.

So, what will he wear at the sandwich shop? โ€œWho knows, man. Probably a chefโ€™s coat. Basketball shorts.โ€

Stay tuned.

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...