Mobile Meals Bolsters Love Kitchen’s Homebound Residents Post-Fire

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KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Thousands of Knoxville residents who rely on the Love Kitchen for meals are now seeking assistance from other organizations after a fire on Friday morning forced the beloved community kitchen to temporarily close its doors.
The Love Kitchen, which has been a staple in the Knoxville community for over 30 years, serves approximately 3,000 meals each week to community members, including homebound individuals who have no other means of accessing food. According to staff, the fire left the entire space covered in black soot, contaminating thousands of pounds of food in the process.
What Was Damaged?
Staff members have identified several items that will need to be discarded due to the fire’s impact:
- Spices and dry goods
- Canned goods (contaminated on the outside)
- Baked items, including thousands of cookies
- Granola bars, oatmeal, and protein drinks sent to homebound residents
However, there is one positive aspect: freezer items were saved.
Before any cleanup can begin, staff are waiting for an insurance adjuster to assess the damage. Executive Director Martin Riggins stated that a full reopening is still weeks away.
“As far as us being able to produce food from here, this week is not happening,” Riggins said. “I would be surprised if it was next week because all of this has to come down and be replaced.”
Riggins explained that ceiling tiles, AC ducts, and vents will need to be either cleaned or replaced before the space can safely be used for food preparation again.
Homebound Residents Still Being Served
Despite the setback, the Love Kitchen is ensuring that its most vulnerable neighbors do not go without. Board President Ernie Roberts contacted Mobile Meals, which agreed to prepare 2,100 meals this week. Love Kitchen drivers will pick up those meals and deliver them along their normal routes.
“Our homebound people will still get food,” Riggins said. “It won’t be the food that we typically make, but it’s food.”
Community Response
Head Chef Faith Cline, who has been cooking at the Love Kitchen for seven years, said the outpouring of support from the community has been overwhelming. Organizations such as Second Harvest, CARM, and FISH have reached out offering resources and kitchen space.
“The situation that we are in right now is very overwhelming to us that have been here,” Cline said. “But it does. It gives you chills. It makes you think, you know, what really, really matters. And yes, this is a lot to do with the building and the damage and all that. But what really matters is the people that we serve. And the fact that people jumped so quickly to be able to help us to make sure people didn’t go hungry. That’s, that’s where it’s at.”
Cline also reflected on how much worse the fire could have been, crediting what she called divine intervention.
“We have kind of a saying around here that God’s hand is on the Love Kitchen,” she said. “With the fire, we were very blessed that it literally got so hot that it burst a pipe and that helped put out the fire. Without that, who knows how much more damage would have been done.”

How You Can Help
Staff members mentioned that they are not yet ready to accept donations or volunteers, but they hope to have more information within the next week.
“Unfortunately, we don’t have answers to be able to say how you can help currently,” Cline said. “But hopefully, in the next couple days or maybe in the next week, we’ll have enough information to be able to then really accept the help that is being offered.”
Riggins emphasized that the road to recovery will take time, but the team remains committed.
“Yes, we’re having a hard time. They have a hard time every single day. And for us to be able to just cry about it that we can’t do it — no, we’re going to figure something out. And we will. But this is an elephant that’s just going to have to be eaten one bite at a time.”
- Author: Tyo Murty

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