Ricardo Rivera at Fuego Vivo (Photo: Michael Donahue)

Tekila Group opened its first area restaurant in 2018. And their newest, A Fuego Vivo, opens in mid-February at 5110 Poplar Avenue, the site of the old Carrabbaโ€™s Italian Grill.

And another restaurant, Zona 55, is planned for Senatobia, Mississippi, says Ricardo Rivera, 23, son of Jose Gomez, who owns the restaurant group with Riveraโ€™s uncle, Alexander Gomez.

โ€œWe started with Tekila, the one in Cordova,โ€ says Rivera, the groupโ€™s controller. โ€œThat one is Tex-Mex. Your chimichangas, the loud, colorful environment people are used to. Then we opened a second the next year in Jackson, Tennessee โ€ฆ pretty much copy and paste. Our third opened in 2022 after COVID, in Southaven, [with] a modern interpretation of Mexican dishes. Nicer, more upscale.โ€

About two years ago, the group opened the elegant Tekila in the old Nineteenth Century Club mansion on Union. โ€œThatโ€™s our steakhouse concept,โ€ Rivera says. โ€œWhen we first opened, people said, โ€˜Mexican? Steakhouse? Those donโ€™t go.โ€™ But they do. Itโ€™s a steakhouse, but itโ€™s inspired by those really nice Mexican restaurants you find in tourist places like Cancรบn.โ€

People are familiar with the sizzling steak dishes served tableside at most Mexican restaurants. But the Tekila on Union features โ€œhigh-end cuts,โ€ like tomahawks. At Fuego Vivo, Rivera says, โ€œWe want to bring Wagyu.โ€

Modern Mexican could describe Fuego Vivoโ€™s fare. Menu items will be โ€œfrom all over the world,โ€ Rivera notes. โ€œIt wouldnโ€™t be right to say weโ€™re โ€˜authentic,โ€™ but we do have Mexican inspiration. A lot of people here in the Mid-South have the belief that Mexican food is chimichangas and burritos. Thatโ€™s just not the case.โ€

Theyโ€™ve hired four chefs for Fuego Vivo. โ€œ[Some] have worked at restaurants in Mexico that specialized in pastas, or in Asian food. Theyโ€™re all going to work together to put out this international menu.โ€

Instead of having someone prepare only guacamole tableside, Fuego Vivo will offer tableside for other items, including salsa. โ€œWe have our salsa lady,โ€ Rivera says. โ€œShe has a bunch of ingredients, different levels of spice.โ€ The salsas are made โ€œjust to your liking โ€ฆ Itโ€™s not all the same red and green sauce every other Tex-Mex serves. We like having a custom touch to it.โ€

As for the look, Fuego Vivo is done in natural colors with gold accents. Mexican architect Filipao Nunes โ€œdid everything,โ€ Rivera says. The space includes meeting rooms and doors that can open up if more seating is needed; an open-air kitchen; a bar that seats 10 each side; and a main dining room. A patio will open in late March. 

Rivera admits they โ€œhad issuesโ€ with Memphis Heritage when opening the Tekila on Union Avenue. โ€œThey didnโ€™t want us to paint the building, which we ultimately did not do. Weโ€™re trying hard to preserve it,โ€ he says. โ€œItโ€™s part of Memphis history. We understand that.โ€

Tekila Group doesnโ€™t plan to stop with the upcoming Senatobia restaurant. More are planned. โ€œWe wanted to keep growing. We donโ€™t want to sit still,โ€ Rivera says.

A ribbon cutting for Fuego Vivo is planned for February 9th. โ€œIโ€™m proud of what weโ€™re doing, especially in the Memphis area,โ€ says Rivera. โ€œWeโ€™re able to support the city. With these next two restaurants, weโ€™re going to hire over 200 new employees.โ€

Rivera acknowledged the โ€œgreat restaurants,โ€ in the area near them. โ€œWe just want to fill that void, with Houstonโ€™s gone. Iโ€™m sure they had a lot of loyal customers. Carrabbaโ€™s as well. 

โ€œWe want to be that restaurant people go to weekly. Weโ€™ll have great food, but thatโ€™s not always what makes a restaurant,โ€ Rivera says. โ€œWe want to stand out by the service we provide. I can go to an amazing restaurant and have the greatest food in the world, but if I donโ€™t feel comfortable, if I donโ€™t feel welcome, I probably wonโ€™t return. For me, service is top priority.โ€

Rivera notes the importance of teamwork in accomplishing this. Weโ€™re โ€œall one team โ€” if one falls, we all fall. We want to dig that deep into the staff here. It does make a difference when youโ€™re all working toward the same goal of satisfying the customer.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...