The upside of downtime
With a reopening on the horizon, Dirty Birds Southern Kitchen found new mission amid pandemic
James Sanders kicked off 2020 with a new venture: opening a restaurant.
Sanders, 45, of Beverly, had already been running Fuze Catering out of a kitchen in Gresham, but he long dreamed of opening a restaurant in the South Side space.
Enter Dirty Birds Southern Kitchen, at 8052 S. Racine Ave., serving up fresh chicken and fish.
“We’re in a food desert where I’m located,” Sanders said. “What I want to do is provide something besides just fried chicken and french fries.”
The restaurant’s Nashville Hot chicken sandwich (with chicken brined for 12 to 16 hours and then covered with a dry marinade) and blackened catfish (made with a “bomb” seasoning) were immediate favorites in the community, the chef said. But within months of opening Dirty Birds, the COVID-19 pandemic hit. Sanders closed the restaurant in
March and plans to reopen the week of Aug. 10.
“At first, I was one of the people who really was skeptical about the whole COVID thing, thinking it was just a common cold, until one of my customers died,” Sanders said. “It was extremely sad.”
New to the menu when Dirty Birds reopens will be jumbo smoked turkey legs and brick chicken, which is cooked on a flat top grill with a brick on top of it, Sanders said. Customers can also get their fan favorites like the Nashville Hot chicken sandwich or chicken and red velvet waffles, a twist on the traditional dish. The kitchen cooks everything fresh daily, down to the Southern-style sides like six-cheese mac and cheese and fried green tomatoes. Meals range between $10 and $14, Sanders said, and sandwiches come with at least one side.
Sanders and his kitchen crew didn’t stop cooking up fresh meals in the past few months during the pandemic, however, instead finding new avenues to feed the community. From June 16 to 27, Dirty Birds partnered with Chicago Delivers and the Foles Believe Foundation to provide more than 1,800 warm, fresh meals to Chicagoans.
Pastor Charlie Dates of Progressive Baptist Church just outside Guaranteed Rate Field launched Chicago Delivers in the wake of the pandemic. Originally, the organization aimed to provide gift cards for grocery delivery services to people receiving benefits through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), since people couldn’t use the benefits to place delivery orders, Dates said.
Even after distributing gift cards, Dates said there was still work to be done to feed the community, one of many ways to “cel
ebrate that they’re made in the likeness of God.” Chicago Delivers also wanted to support Black-owned restaurants, so the group partnered with Dirty Birds for a second phase of food distribution in June to provide hot meals to anyone visiting the church’s parking lot. The pastor knew Sanders for years and his food to be “reliably tasty,” so Dirty Birds was a natural fit for the organization, Dates said.
“Chef James [Sanders], he understands the mission. He’s looking for an opportunity to serve,” Dates said. “Whatever we pay him, he delivers more food than we’re paying for.”
Anyone could take as many meals as they needed to feed their households without providing an explanation, said Shonta Connolly, operations director for Chicago Delivers.
“People do not have to feel as if they’ve given up their humanity or their dignity,” Connolly said. “They come and get food without us knowing their situations.”
Chicago Delivers is now working to acquire a food truck to start a third phase of its food meal distribution program (phase two ended in June) throughout the city,
Connolly said.
Sanders is still feeding the community through his catering company. He and his staff are currently making 900 meals daily for 300 residents at a Chicago drug rehabilitation center.
Dishing out 6,300 meals a week demands early mornings and late evenings in the kitchen, Sanders said. He hired four new kitchen staff from a restaurant that’s permanently closed because of the pandemic.
Sanders’ alarm goes off promptly at 2:30 a.m., and he aims to be in the kitchen within an hour to start preparing fresh biscuits, cornbread and chicken. After a long day of baking, brining and blackening, the kitchen finally wraps things up around 8 p.m., and Sanders said he spends an hour or two with his daughters, 11 and 14, before heading to bed by 10 p.m.
“The older I get, I’m not a fan of the hours, working like 16 hours a day,” Sanders said. “Still, it doesn’t feel like work. When you love what you’re doing, it doesn’t feel like work at all.”