Angel and Michael Patrick at the recent Youth Villages Soup Sunday

Rizzoโ€™s, a South Main staple for several years, is shutting its doors at the end of March.

โ€œWeโ€™re going to close at the end of the month,โ€ says chef/owner Michael Patrick. โ€œItโ€™s just a numbers game again. I canโ€™t have a better quality living doing what weโ€™re doing. Labor costs, food costs. And everything is out of whack.โ€ Patrick says he and his wife, Angel, talked it over. The issue: โ€œWhat do we do to somehow find a way I can make more money?”

“Iโ€™m having to increase pay to my employees,” he says. “Iโ€™m having to increase costs to the menu. Things are not what they were or could be.โ€

Rizzoโ€™s originally opened October, 2011, on G. E. Patterson Avenue near Main Street. It moved to its current location at 492 South Main in March, 2015.

Patrick originally moved to Memphis from Ohio to open the now-defunct Elvis Presleyโ€™s Memphis on Beale Street. He then worked for chef Erling Jensen before going to work at McEwenโ€™s on Monroe, where he stayed for seven years. โ€œThatโ€™s where I kind of cut my teeth in the city,โ€ says Patrick. He then worked at EP Delta Kitchen and Bar before opening his own place.

Patrick, who describes the food at Rizzoโ€™s as โ€œSouthern-inspired,โ€ says, โ€œWe always gave consistently great food and consistently great service. If the food is great and service is great, people are going to come back.”

Patrick, who comes from a fine-dining background, says, โ€œI took that and tried to make more homey-type food. Comfort food. Just executed at a chefโ€™s level.โ€

Patrick says he believed in giving impeccable service, which included โ€œcrumbing tables, switching out wine glasses, not letting the entree hit the table before the appetizer has been cleared. Rizzoโ€™s is definitely a little more relaxed than fine dining. I call it โ€˜casual fine dining.โ€™โ€

Patrick plans to stay in the area. โ€œMy wifeโ€™s got children in Mississippi and weโ€™re not going anywhere. If I went anywhere it would be Southaven or here in Memphis. I donโ€™t see myself leaving Memphis.โ€

And Patrick can’t say what’s next, at this point. โ€œI donโ€™t know. I’m talking with some folks, trying to get things in line. But right now Iโ€™m just focusing on the close here, and Iโ€™m quite sure my reputation and good name will make something happen.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...