Archives
 By  Staff Reports Published 
11:24 am Monday, March 10, 2008

Employee spotlight

By Staff
Backstreet Deli &Catering to offer breakfast
Kim West
Names: Sarah and Greg Willis
Hometown: Russellville
High School: Russellville
Birthdays: Dec. 27 (Sarah) &Dec. 17 (Greg)
Position/Employer: Owners, Backstreet Deli &Catering
Family: Two sons and four grandchildren
FCT: What do you enjoy most about owning your own business?
GW: We've been doing catering for about eight years now and we've had this restaurant for 15 months. I guess we enjoy the independence of it.
SW: It's also been a good way to meet people and make new friends.
FCT: What are your most popular lunch menu items?
GW: Our homemade chicken salad, potato soup, chili and cobblers, which are all made-from-scratch. We have a variety of sandwich breads that are also popular, especially the Cuban bread and the croissants.
FCT: When did you decide to offer breakfast on Saturdays?
SW: We just came up with it a couple of weeks ago because ever since we had opened the restaurant, people had been asking us to serve breakfast. We're going to have everything from eggs and country ham to pancakes and chocolate gravy with biscuits.
FCT: How important is catering to your business?
GW: It's a big part of it – we actually bought this (restaurant) building for the kitchen so we could use it for catering.
SW: We cater anything from finger foods to full-plate meals. Last December we catered 29 events – it was very busy but you don't want to turn down a customer. With catering, it always stays busy from June until December.
FCT: What has been the largest event your business has catered? How many events per week are usually booked?
GW: We did a wedding five years ago that had 500 people. There was also an event in January where I cooked 442 8-ounce ribeyes.
SW: I'm the director of the A.W. Todd Centre, and we cater a lot of full-size events there. We probably cater one to two events each week throughout the year, and we can do on or off-site catering.
FCT: Where do you enjoy eating out?
SW: We don't eat out a lot but we like The Apple Barn in Pigeon Forge, Tenn. They bring you an orange julep made of fruit juices, apple fritters and fresh apple butter while you wait for your food.
GW: They have just about everything there at the restaurant, including apple orchids, a winery, ice cream shop and a store.
FCT: What kind of activities do you enjoy in your spare time?
GW: We like to ride motorcycles, and we actually ride a trike. We've been riding them for a year now, and it's a new adventure for us.

Also on Franklin County Times
Roberts pleads not guilty to 106 counts
Main, News, Russellville
By Brady Petree For the FCT 
July 8, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — A Georgia woman facing 106 counts ranging from possession of child pornography to first-degree sodomy has pleaded not guilty to the cha...
Ex-mayor Oliver, 82, dies
Franklin County, Main, News, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
July 8, 2026
Former Russellville mayor and retired U.S. Army National Guard Major General Troy Oliver, 82, a 1961 graduate of Belgreen High School, died Saturday. ...
Patriotic banner donated to Tharptown VFD
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
July 8, 2026
R U S S E L L V I L L E — Lottie Coan, who has served as secretary- treasurer for the Tharptown Volunteer Fire Department since 2015, was sitting in h...
Miller Family Dairy opens processing facility
Features, Main, News, ...
By Addi Broadfoot For the FCT 
July 8, 2026
CROOKED OAK — Miller Family Dairy unveiled its new milk processing facility June 30, bringing the business one step closer to bottling its own milk, p...
Great Pretenders take stage July 16
Columnists, News, Opinion
HERE AND NOW
July 8, 2026
Each summer, the W.C. Handy Music Festival brings outstanding music and entertainment to communities across the Shoals. For more than four decades, th...
DAR chapter unearths patriot’s story
Franklin County, News
Chelsea Retherford For the FCT 
July 8, 2026
In a forgotten patch of woods on a farm near Cloverdale, history had lain hidden for generations. It took a determined group of local historians, gene...
Hartley shares her ancestor’s legacy
News
By Chelsea Retherford Staff Writer 
July 8, 2026
Patricia Hartley has always felt a strong sense of patriotism and duty to community and family. It was only recently that she discovered those were fa...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *