Chattanooga Times Free Press

Chatter Box Cafe sells hope by the pound

- Contact Mark Kennedy at mkennedy@ timesfreep­ress.com.

Fourteen years ago, Brandon Ellis hit rock bottom.

Ellis, then in his early 20s, was facing felony drug charges, he said, with the possibilit­y of spending significan­t time behind bars. The Kentucky native said he started selling drugs after he dropped out of college.

“For some people, like it or not, that’s their reality,” said Ellis, 36. “You wake up, sell drugs, make money and survive. … Until you are taken out of it, you can’t really see it for what it is.”

After only a few months in jail, Ellis got a second chance. He was released into a faithbased program called Adult & Teen Challenge that provided structure, mentors and a path to independen­ce.

Now, more than a decade later, Ellis is a small business owner. His Chatter Box Cafe at 6801 Shallowfor­d Road is home base for his food truck and catering business. You may see him on Signal Mountain Road this week selling barbecue from one of his trucks.

He specialize­s in cooking pulled-pork barbecue, ribs and beef brisket along with side dishes such as potato salad and smoked macaroni and cheese.

Some days his 2-yearold daughter, Harper, hangs out with him. It’s Ellis’ dream to build the business so he can attend Harper’s after-school activities in a few years.

“I just want to be able to cook enough to pay my bills and live,” he said.

Ellis believes that his work ethic, honed as a child in the tobacco fields of Kentucky, will help him make it as an entreprene­ur. Growing up near Franklin, Kentucky, population 9,010, Ellis said, he was working for his grandfathe­r planting tobacco by the time he was 8 years old.

“My grandfathe­r showed me that if I wanted anything all I had to do was be willing to work,” Ellis said. “If I wanted a BB gun and it cost $100, I needed to make $100.”

Meanwhile, Ellis said that when he was a child, his mother worked two jobs and his father was not always around.

At age 15, Ellis, who is Black, moved to Forsyth County, Georgia, to live with an uncle. There, he learned how to navigate in a largely white environmen­t, he said — the county’s population is less than 3% Black. He returned to Kentucky for his final year of high school and then briefly attended Lindsey Wilson College in Columbia, Kentucky, before dropping out.

“I wasn’t serious about it, and [I] was just wasting time and money,” he said. “I ended up coming back to Franklin. That’s where the twists and turns came into play.”

Back home, Ellis worked several lowerpayin­g jobs before yielding to the temptation of the streets, he said.

“I ended up getting into traffickin­g drugs — traffickin­g cocaine, marijuana, pills,” he said.

Once out of prison he used the Adult & Teen Challenge program to redirect his life.

“Building relationsh­ips in Chattanoog­a [through Adult & Teen Challenge] helped me,” he said. “I had a support system at church and mentors. I wasn’t just having to figure out my own.”

In Chattanoog­a, he started a commercial cleaning business that grew to involve about 30 clients — including the Lookout Mountain Club and the Manker Patten Tennis Club — and a dozen employees.

Eventually, Ellis handed the cleaning business off to an aunt and decided to try something new. Soon, he began booking events and using a concession­s truck — a converted horse trailer — to grow a small barbecue cooking business.

Earlier this year, he took over the lease of a produce store on Shallowfor­d Road near Lee Highway and began to serve take-out barbecue dishes to a growing customer base. There is a patio at the property that he hopes will come alive with guests once the COVID-19 pandemic is over.

He said he has managed to build the business without taking on debt. He has received small-business grants from the Community Foundation, Tennessee Valley Federal Credit Union and the city of Chattanoog­a through a Community Reinvestme­nt Grant.

Ellis said he hopes to soon deploy a new 52-foot food truck with a commercial kitchen that will become the beating heart of his food operation.

“My goal is to continue busting my butt,” he said. “I want to have the flexibilit­y to be a very active father.”

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO ?? Brandon Ellis stands in his restaurant, Chatter Box Cafe.
STAFF FILE PHOTO Brandon Ellis stands in his restaurant, Chatter Box Cafe.
 ??  ?? Mark Kennedy
Mark Kennedy
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY MARK KENNEDY ?? Brandon Ellis and his 2-year-old daughter, Harper, are pictured by Ellis’ Chatter Box barbecue truck.
STAFF PHOTO BY MARK KENNEDY Brandon Ellis and his 2-year-old daughter, Harper, are pictured by Ellis’ Chatter Box barbecue truck.

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