Restaurant
Will
Be Featured On
'90 Miles
With
Chef
Garrett'
BYBILLJONES
STAFFWRITER
PublictelevisionviewersacrossEastTennesseewilllearnabout
Greeneville's Tipton's Cafe when a new travel and dining show called "90 Miles with Chef Garrett"
airs on East Tennessee Public Television.
Produced by Atom-Smasher
Productions, the new show is still in the production phase, Executive Producer Matt Mullins said on
Saturday morning as he and Chef Garrett Scanlan videotaped a segment for the new show at Tipton's
Cafe.
Tipton's was founded as Linton's Cafe in 1942, and the small diner
on West Depot Street has never been out of business, according to Jim Cutshaw, who has operated it
under the Tipton's Cafe name since 1966.
Cutshaw's mother-in-law, who was
a Tipton, began operating the cafe under the Tipton's name many years ago, he
said.
"I just kept the name when I took over," Cutshaw
said.
'90 MILES' CONCEPT
Chef Garrett
Scanlan, a Dublin, Ireland, native who operates two "Garrett's Downtown Deli" restaurants in
Knoxville, is the host of the new show. A European-trained master chef, Scanlan spent 30-plus years
in some of the world's finest restaurants.
Scanlan will be familiar to
those who are regular viewers of "Live at Five at Four," a weekday-afternoon program that airs on
Knoxville TV station WBIR (Channel 10).
He explained during a Saturday
morning interview that the concept of the new show is for him to spin a dial, select a location, use
it as a starting point, and drive 90 miles, stopping for breakfast, lunch, and dinner along the
way.
For the segment taped on Saturday, the producers chose Greeneville
as the starting point and chose Tipton's Cafe, which had been recommended to them, to tape the
breakfast portion of the segment, Executive Producer Mullins said.
The
lunch portion of the segment taped on Saturday was scheduled to be taped in a small bakery in
Bristol, while the dinner segment was scheduled to be taped in a restaurant in Meadowview, Va.,
according to Mullins.
The Virginia restaurant is located 90 miles from
Greeneville, in keeping with the show's theme, Mullins said.
The show
also will feature segments in which Chef Garrett cooks dishes inspired by the restaurants he
visits.
'BREAKFAST SPECIAL'
On Saturday
morning the silver-haired, classically trained chef ate the Tipton's Cafe "breakfast special" of
fried eggs, biscuits and gravy, sausage (or bacon) and sliced tomatoes. He followed that up with a
grilled donut, a Tipton's Cafe favorite.
While breakfasting at the packed
counter inside the restaurant, Scanlan, who was dressed in all-black chef's attire, chatted with
fellow diners about why they frequent Tipton's Cafe and what dishes they most enjoy
there.
The comments were captured on a digital video camera by Executive
Producer Mullins.
SOME 'REGULARS'
Among
the Saturday-morning regulars who were in the restaurant while taping was in progress were Toni
Weems, who told Scanlan and Mullins that she had been coming regularly to Tipton's Cafe since the
1940s, having grown up across the street in a building that recently
burned.
She noted that she has morning coffee at Tipton's every weekday
morning and enjoys breakfast there each Saturday.
Weems said she also
enjoys catching up on the news at Tipton's on weekday mornings.
Other
Saturday-morning regulars who were interviewed for the broadcast included Anita Medlin, and West
Greene High School Principal Larry Bible and his wife, Donna.
Bible told
the interviewers that the couple's two adult children, who now live in Raleigh, N.C., and Dallas,
Texas, respectively, never miss a chance to eat at Tipton's Cafe when they return to
Greeneville.
Bible also recalled that his seven-member family often ate
at Tipton's Cafe when he was growing up.
Medlin said she stops by often
to visit with Michelle Cutshaw, daughter of cafe owners Jim and Edna Cutshaw.
FOOD PLUS 'FELLOWSHIP'
Jim Cutshaw, who operates the restaurant
with his wife, Edna, their daughter, Michelle, and a few long-time employees, said he also serves as
a Deputy Circuit Court Clerk, signing arrest warrants for police officers and sheriff's deputies
during his 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. shift at the restaurant.
Executive Producer
Mullins said after the Saturday-morning taping that he had "loved" Tipton's cafe. "I thought it was
fantastic!" he said.
He pointed out that one customer had, perhaps,
summed up a major attraction of the restaurant when she used the word "fellowship" to describe what
patrons enjoy as much as the
food.