Joe’s Township Tavern opening in Knox

The Enterprise — Michael Koff

Joe Conklin stirs Alfredo sauce Thursday in his new restaurant, Joe’s Township Tavern.

KNOX — A new restaurant is coming to the Hill. 
Joe’s Township Tavern will be open on Friday, Dec. 23,  for takeout in the same Township Road building in Knox that housed the former Township Tavern.

Knox native Joe Conklin purchased the building with his wife, Nadia Raza, the former owner of Curry Patta, Altamont’s now-closed Pakistani restaurant. 

The tavern will be takeout-only until the couple receive their state liquor license, Conklin told The Enterprise this week, adding that he hopes that will be within a month. 

During that period, the menu — made up of traditional tavern foods like burgers and quesadillas — will be somewhat smaller than what Conklin hopes to provide once the business is in full swing. 

“We’re getting everything going for the first time here, new kitchen crew and everything,” he said, “and some of the dine-in food we want to do, like steak, we don’t want to pack to go.”

He said it will “definitely be an open menu,” with items “changing pretty often.”

Conklin said he’s looking into delivery options, whether it be an in-house driver or through a third party, the viability of which will depend on the demand the new eatery gets. 

Noting the other Hilltown restaurants — Maple on the Lake and Babbling Brook — Conklin said he hopes that his tavern will be more than “just another bar up on the Hill.”

“We’re going to try and make it a little more like a sports bar,” he said. “When we do the dine-in, I’m hoping to have a pool table, darts, cornhole games in here. Maybe a little more on that side of entertainment. I have some other ideas for outdoor eating space and stuff, but that’s all dependent on how business goes.” 

The primary workforce is Conklin, his brother, and “another local guy,” with Raza helping out, he said. 

As for renovations or upgrades to the property, Conklin said they’re not planning anything major, and that the previous owners had “put some money into this place.”

In addition to enlarging the kitchen a bit, Conklin said they’ll “probably be updating the bathroom, and I put some new TVs in here to get more of a sports-bar feel going. Get some football playing, maybe UFC, stuff like that,” he said of the Ultimate Fighting Championship. 

More Hilltowns News

  • Normally, a town’s reorganizational meeting is when it affirms salary schedules and other important town business for the year, but without a quorum on its town board, it’s unclear how the town of Berne has proceeded.

  • According to the state’s General Municipal Law, every local government must annually file a financial report with the state’s comptroller, which is known as the Annual Update Document or AUD. A town like Knox, with a population under 5,000 has up to 60 days after the close of its fiscal year to file its AUD. Knox, however, is several years behind in filing its AUDs. 

  • The vagaries of New York State’s ability and willingness to involve itself in local affairs cropped up in many Enterprise stories this year, and revealed the gaps in the patchwork system of agencies that are supposed to keep the machine running. 

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