The East Cobb Interview: Doug Turbush, Seed/Stem/Drift owner

Doug Turbush

Since opening Seed Kitchen & Bar at Merchant’s Walk Shopping Center in 2011, Doug Turbush has dramatically influenced the restaurant scene in East Cobb.

He talks about his “modern American cuisine” menu being the result of having “a big sandbox to play in” as a creative chef.

The phrase also could apply to the community where he, his wife and son live, and that has long been a bastion of family-friendly, chain and franchise restaurants.

After serving as executive chef at now-closed Nava and Bluepointe—once part of the Buckhead Life Restaurant Group empire founded by Atlanta dining impresario Pano Karatassos—Turbush wanted to create an eclectic neighborhood dining atmosphere close to home.

He did market research and worked up a business plan, consulted with his former boss, Atlanta restaurateur Kevin Rathbun, got a small-business loan and became a first-time restaurant owner, near the spot of the former Merchant’s Walk library branch.

He recalls eating at Red Sky Tapas & Bar on Johnson Ferry Road and being told by someone there not to open a restaurant in East Cobb for what he had in mind, that it wouldn’t make it. Turbush had done his homework, and thought otherwise.

“The market was there,” Turbush said in an interview with East Cobb News. “We knew we didn’t have the expense account [diners]. We knew we didn’t have the Buckhead singles scene. What we wanted to do was to bring some sort of personality to the neighborhood.”

While Turbush admits he’s “a little jealous” of the vibrant restaurant scenes in Marietta and Roswell that sandwich East Cobb, “they don’t have the market we have.”

Mostly, he said, it was the revamping of Merchant’s Walk, anchored by a new Whole Foods store, that convinced him the time was right, in more ways than he initially imagined.

His background blending Asian, Latin and Southern flavors and locally sourced ingredients turned out a menu that has remained relatively consistent in eight years of business.

In stepping in an area that hasn’t been a haven of adventurous cuisine, Turbush has succeeded in creating something of a sandbox of his own in affluent East Cobb.

“I wanted to have a quaint little bistro in East Cobb,” Turbush said. “What I got was a really busy restaurant.”

In 2013, he opened the Stem Wine Bar next door to Seed and Drift Fish House & Oyster Bar at The Avenue East Cobb opened in 2016.

Last fall, he was named Restaurateur of the Year in the small and independent category by the Georgia Restaurant Association, and recently was recognized for that award during a legislative session at the Georgia Capitol.

On Tuesday, Drift will mark its fourth anniversary with a Bluegrass Birthday Bash that includes a special oyster, crab and lobster menu, drink specials and live music.

Seed Kitchen & Bar

Seed’s emergence as a restaurant that drew notice from dedicated Atlanta foodies was followed by some other chef-driven concepts in East Cobb. Some of them, including Zeal and Common Quarter/Muss & Turner’s, have closed in the same Johnson Ferry Road corridor.

Turbush, a Wisconsin native, relocated to Atlanta for his wife’s work (she’s now retired from the Coca-Cola Co.) and they moved to East Cobb as they have raised their son, who’s a student at the Wheeler Magnet School.

“With each new place, we’ve brought something that wasn’t here,” Turbush said of his three restaurants.

Turbush began making plans for Stem soon after opening Seed, in part to accommodate diners turned away when his original restaurant was at capacity.

While there’s still some of that overlap, Stem also has special wine tastings to attract another kind of diner, with a menu of small plate offerings.

When Drift opened in March 2016, “there was no dedicated high-quality seafood place here,” Turbush said. “I could have put a steakhouse there, but there’s a steakhouse on every corner in Atlanta.”

Drift underwent some growing pains, and Turbush encountered a rarity— a one-star review—from noted dining critic Corby Kummer, who briefly lived in Atlanta.

“I don’t know what happened there,” Turbush said. “I took everything he said to heart, but we reviewed those items and we still have most of them on the menu. Everyone’s got an opinion and he’s got the pen.”

Drift is the only restaurant in Georgia that’s listed by a seafood watch organization for following sustainable seafood practices.

Turbush attributes his longevity to focusing on satisfying the locals.

“I would hope that we’ve helped elevate the dining scene in East Cobb,” Turbush said. “But the biggest reward is someone who’s been living here for 20 years, who says thank you.”

Drift Fish House and Oyster Bar

He regularly gets offers to expand, open a new restaurant somewhere else, or entertain a new concept, but he’s leery of many of those pitches.

He said he wouldn’t rule out adding to his business, as long as it’s an opportunity that doesn’t require a lot of capital and time.

“We have aspirations for growth,” he said, but he can’t say for now what possible opportunities those might be.

The restaurant industry is suffering a decline in the full-service area, but Turbush said “we’re not seeing that yet.”

An advantage he feels he has is that “our biggest customers become our greatest ambassadors.” Those local diners spread the word, and now he’s seeing the grown children of some of his original customers come in for a bite to eat.

What do those diners like when they come to Seed?

“Our No. 1 seller is the Chicken Schnitzel,” Turbush said, without hesitation, a dish made with miso mustard, oven-dried tomato arugula and parmesan and cooked in wine. Popular side dishes include the caramelized brussels sprouts and cauliflower.

Turbush said roughly two-thirds of the menu “I can’t change much,” due to customer demand. Most of what does change is the seasonal part of the menu.

“The reason that so many restaurants fail is that anyone can get in the restaurant business,” Turbush said. “I watch a lot of restaurants get away from their core business. These are my core businesses.”

The question he says he keeps asking when potential suitors approach is: “Are we the best version of ourselves?”

It’s a question he also puts to the test in adapting his business to changing demands in the restaurant industry, including an appeal to a younger generation of up-and-coming diners.

“I’m very calculated and cautious about what I’m doing here,” Turbush said. “I have a good thing going and I recognize it.”

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East Cobb food scores: Aspen’s; Cherokee Cattle; Drift; Goldberg’s; Mazzy’s; Nana; and more

Drift Fish House and Oyster Bar

The following East Cobb restaurant scores from Dec. 3-14 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing to view details of the inspection:

3 Colors Asian Kitchen
2060 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 160
December 10, 2018 Score: 92, Grade: A

Aspen’s Signature Steaks
2942 Shallowford Road
December 10, 2018 Score: 85, Grade: B

Cherokee Cattle Co.
2710 Canton Road
December 13, 2018 Score: 96, Grade: A

Cherry On Top Delights
4665 Lower Roswell Road, Suite 107
December 12, 2018 Score: 94, Grade: A

Davis Elementary School
2433 Jamerson Road
December 6, 2018 Score: 97, Grade: A

Delkwood Grill
2769 Delk Road
December 10, 2018 Score: 86, Grade: B

Drift Fish House & Oyster Bar 
4475 Roswell Road, Suite 1410
December 14, 2018 Score: 91, Grade: A

Goldberg’s Bagel Co. & Deli 
1062 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite A110
December 6, 2018 Score: 98, Grade: A

Kincaid Elementary School
1410 Kincaid Road
December 6, 2018 Score: 100, Grade: A

Los Bravos
2125 Roswell Road, Suite B-40
December 4, 2018 Score: 96, Grade: A

Mazzy’s Sports Bar & Grill II 
2217 Roswell Road, Suite A-200
December 5, 2018 Score: 91, Grade: A

Mirko Pasta
1281 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 120
December 3, 2018 Score: 71, Grade: C

Moe’s Southwest Grill 
688 Johnson Ferry Road
December 7, 2018 Score: 97, Grade: A

Moxie Burger
2421 Shallowford Road, Suite 158
December 10, 2018 Score: 96, Grade: A

Mr. Wonton
3595 Canton Road, Suite 328
December 12, 2018 Score: 95, Grade: A

Nana Thai Eatery
2940 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite C
December 4, 2018 Score: 97, Grade: A

Papa John’s Pizza
4811 Lower Roswell Road
December 12, 2018 Score: 100, Grade: A

Sabor do Brasil
2800 Delk Road, Suite E
December 5, 2018 Score: 88, Grade: B

Shallowford Falls Elementary School
3500 Lassiter Road
December 4, 2018 Score: 90, Grade: A

Sprayberry High School
2525 Sandy Plains Road
December 5, 2018 Score: 97, Grade: A

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East Cobb Biz Notes: Drift Fish House and Oyster Bar open for lunch; Small Business Saturday and more

Drift Fish House and Oyster Bar

Earlier this month Drift Fish House and Oyster Bar began serving lunch on weekdays. The hours are from 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday-Friday and the menu features features salads, sandwiches, starters, cold bar items and selected desserts from the dinner menu.

Doug Turbush, who owns Seed and Stem Wine Bar at Merchants Walk, opened Drift at The Avenue East Cobb (4475 Roswell Road) in March 2016.

Small Business Saturday

The annual Small Business Saturday promotion is taking place again this coming Saturday, and among the newer East Cobb businesses taking part is Nancy’s Vintage Shop (1050 E. Piedmont Road, Suite 102).

Owner Nancy Hartung is calling her event the Holiday Soirree, and from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. customers can enjoy a variety of discounts, treats and freebies. She opened her store at the Piedmont Commons Shopping Center (across from the McCleskey-East Cobb YMCA) in March, and sells clothing and collectibles from the 1960s-1990s.

Also taking part in Small Business Saturday is Bookmiser (3822 Roswell Road), which has been a longtime proponent of the Shop Small campaign.

Small Business Saturday was begun by American Express in 2010 to aid small businesses at the start of the holiday shopping season, which is typically dominated by national retailers. Its small business impact statement claims that 67 cents out of every dollar spent at a local business stays in the community.

Freaking Incan update

A few weeks back we noted that the Freaking Incan restaurant was briefly closing and relocating nearby at at the Sandy Plains Village Shopping Center.

Yesterday they announced that the new spot is opening on Dec. 1, next to the Movie Tavern, at 4651 Woodstock Road, Suite 305. The hours will be 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m.

Stocking the Brumby ES food pantry

An update to something else we posted last week about the 5th year anniversary celebration for Honest-1 auto care on Saturday: Owner Butch Carter tells us that if you bring by a bag of donated items for the Brumby Elementary School food pantry, you’ll get a voucher for an oil change.

The festivities go from 10-4 and include hamburgers and hot dogs and raffle prizes. Carter is involved in the Rotary Club of East Cobb, which does a lot of work in the Brumby ES community.

Earlier this month MUST Ministries opened the pantry, and Carter says the items needed the most are peanut butter, jelly, canned meats, beef stew, spaghetti noodles and sauce and granola or breakfast bars.

Bring a bag of some of those items to Honest-1 (1391 East Cobb Drive), and the oil change is yours.

Tell us about your business

Do you have business news to share? We’ll post your openings and non-sales events here, including charitable activities. E-mail us at editor@eastcobbnews.com.

If you want to promote your business (including sales and specials other than grand openings), email us at advertising@eastcobbnews.com and we’ll be glad to send you a media kit.

 

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