Tyler Plagmann originally wanted to be a comic book artist.
โI had several characters,โ he says. โI even pursued it a little bit more when I was cooking. I created a series with a chef who fought demons from hell.โ
The chefโs name was Jim, says Plagmann. โIt was just an amalgamation of many different people I thought an amazing chef could have been.โ
Plagmann has become Jim in real life (minus the demons). A veteran chef of fine dining restaurants, he is now executive sous chef at The Peabody, as well as executive chef of the hotelโs Chez Philippe restaurant, which recently reopened after being closed since the pandemic.
Cooking wasnโt the first career for Plagmann, who is from Evansville, Indiana. โFourteen years ago, I was a welder. I used to weld when I was younger โ weld on barges.
โBecause I didnโt know what I wanted to do and I was just stumbling through life as most people were at that age. I was gaining new and exciting experiences. And it was a dangerous thing to learn.โ
A sous chef friend at a resort asked him if he wanted a job, and Plagmann went to work as a dishwasher and pantry/garde manger cook at the resort. โIt was the first time in my life I was never bored.
โIโve never seen a job where people can just create something. Just whatever they want to do. And youโre constantly tasting. And thereโs fire, knives, and yelling.โ
Plagmann, who eventually rose to executive sous chef, worked at restaurants in Vermont, Boston, Portland, and Nashville before moving to Memphis.
Memphis โfelt more like home than Nashville ever could. Maybe itโs just due to my upbringing and surroundings growing up, but you could see there was a lot of life in the structures, the buildings. Thereโs beautiful murals. Sun Studio. Itโs all there. My driver picked me up at the airport and he was playing blues.โ
In his Chez Philippe position, Plagmann says, โI create the menu through the collaboration between myself and my sous chef. This is the first time that The Peabody has officially ever had a tasting menu inside Chez Philippe.โ
The restaurant now has a โmore global-style tasting menu,โ Plagmann says.
โWe have a 10-course tasting menu. So, youโre getting the smaller, more flavorful, more intricate types of food, as opposed to the fine dining we did in the past.โ
The menu includes an amuse-bouche snack, a bread course, a vegetable course, a fish/seafood course, an intermezzo, two meat courses, and petit fours. โYou also get a take-home of bananas Foster banana bread.โ
The Peabody wanted Chez Philippeโs menu โto be more modern.โ That means, โFrench techniques, but with Asian and Nordic influences.โ
The next menu, which will begin November 24th, includes โmore fermentations. More Nordic-style plating with French and Asian ingredients.โ
Plagmann puts a lot of emphasis on vegetables and their different preparations. The coho salmon is grilled on a yakitori grill and basted with a fermented satsuma glaze.
He plans to change the menu โevery two to three weeks. We already started working on the menu after this menu.โ
Plagmann worked fast after he got to Memphis. โBasically, in the span of a few weeks, I had to build my team, create a new menu, get plates, bowls, equipment, learn about the city. Itโs a completely new, foreign city to me.โ
The back, as well as the front of the house, had to work fast. Plagmann had to get acquainted with โlocal products, vendors, farms in a limited amount of time to open up Chez Philippe and present a tasting menu. It really was about two to three weeks.โ
Food and beverage management had to build a team of servers and get everything going in a very short amount of time.
Chez Philippe reopened October 20th. โEvery review we get, itโs a little overwhelming. Itโs a very humbling experience to see just how much people have really taken to the food that we are creating and the service we are offering.โ

