Gent, a men's upscale barbershop concept, opened earlier this summer in St. Paul and Allison Kaplan from Mpls St. Paul magazine stopped by to check it out. Check out her review here:
Men Who Groom Together...
by Allison Kaplan, mspmag.com
Even more surprising than happening upon new men’s salon Gent at Victoria’s Crossing in St. Paul on Saturday: the place was hopping. One guy practiced on the putting green out front while a group of groomsmen sipped mimosas and watched sports highlights on the flatscreen. They were waiting for wedding day straight razor shaves.
The owner’s story is a familiar one: Local guy, unsatisfied with discount barber shops, but uncomfortable in girly salons. He’s created an upscale, masculine setting with haircuts starting at $29 (gray “blending” starts at $35). The staff includes both barbers and stylists. The salon is stocked with man toys: drinks, iPads, TVs.
Seems like a great idea, yet similar concepts for men have failed. One of the main Twin Cities competitors at the moment, Raze – with two west metro locations, is backed by behemoth Regis Corp.
Still, Gent has a great vibe. I like the decision to place it on Grand Avenue in St. Paul, where shoppers embrace local and men often get short shrift. What could give Gent that extra edge is retail. The front of the shop features cuff links and Leatherman tools. Grooming lines include Jack Black and Joe. Nothing too fancy or fussy – just cool stuff for men who care. Yes, guys, it’s cool to care. 867 Grand Ave., St. Paul, 651-797-4294
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Strib gives Meritage 4 stars!
Rick Nelson of the Star Tribune reviews Meritage this week and he states that "A dazzling new oyster bar has enriched the Meritage experience." Here at Shea, we LOVE that he thinks so, since we recently worked with the Kleins on the design of the new addition. We also agree with Rick...it is one of our favorite restaurants in town...and we think it deserves the 4 stars! Way to go Russell and Desta!
Meritage is a place where seafood is king
Article by: RICK NELSON , Star Tribune Updated: August 17, 2011 - 3:38 PM
A dazzling new oyster bar has enriched the Meritage experience
Meritage doesn't bill itself as a seafood restaurant. But that's exactly what it is, plus a whole lot more. It just might be the best of its kind in the Midwest.
Here's the back story: The downtown St. Paul restaurant, which is just shy of its fourth birthday, is located off the glorious lobby of the equally glorious Hamm Building, and when an adjacent storefront became available last year, co-owners Russell and Desta Klein wisely snapped it up. The much-needed elbow room was transformed into an oyster bar outfitted in the same style as the urbane dining room, and voila: What had been a French restaurant with a flair for seafood has become a French-accented seafood fanatic's destination. And a fantastic one, at that.
What this diner appreciates most about chef Russell Klein's work, along with his faith in downtown St. Paul, is how he skillfully finds parity between classic and contemporary, formal and casual. That culinary balancing act is best viewed through the prism of lobster -- specifically, Klein's approach to it -- because anyone who loves lobster will adore Meritage.
Purists can enjoy it steamed and chilled, wrestling it to submission while it's still in the shell. Classicists will fall all over how Klein adds just enough gelatin to a decadent lobster consommé, fills it with generous chunks of tender poached lobster, then tops it with a sweet corn purée, a flavor marriage that can only be described as celestial. It's the epitome of excess, in a gleefully good way, and when that gossamer gelée comes in contact with your tongue, it melts back into consommé, a marvelous sleight-of-hand.
Klein also makes a wicked-good workingman's lobster roll, kissing the sweet, succulent meat with bits of tarragon and celery. It's an homage to his youth on New York's Long Island, where he spent plenty of time fishing the Atlantic and nurturing his passion for seafood.
Because the Kleins have gone to the considerable effort of developing relationships with purveyors on both coasts, their raw bar is stocked with oysters rarely, if ever, seen in the Twin Cities. Along with a second-to-none selection (which also happily includes whelks, coaxed from a Maine forager), the oysters are also beautifully and skillfully presented, a rarity for this landlocked region.
There can't be a more impressive shrimp cocktail. Klein doesn't pull any punches, using ultra-jumbo shrimp that are wild-caught off Mexico's Baja coast, then gently poaching them so each bite boasts a pronounced snap; the accompanying cocktail sauce is appropriately lively. Earlier this year, my favorite seat in the house was at the zinc-topped bar, where I indulged, guilt-free, in my hunger for sweet, unadulterated crab.
Even something so familiar as raw tuna gets the velvet glove treatment, tossing it with a feisty combination of ginger juice and a Sriracha-laced mayonnaise before spooning it into crunchy taro-root taco shells. They're $3.50 a pop, one of a half-dozen flirtatious little "amusements" -- don't miss the refreshing gazpacho, or the heart-attack-inducing duck liver pâté -- and limiting yourself to one is close to impossible.
Several entrees on the current menu are showcases for both seafood and Klein's considerable skills. He's at the top of his form with a riff on bouillabaisse, with a little ratatouille thrown in for good measure. It pays tribute to iconic French dishes while inserting a modern American interpretation, with crisp-skinned wild striped bass surrounded by a finely calibrated flurry of tastes. Ditto a reinvented Nicoise salad, with braised escarole pinch-hitting for fresh greens and velvety, barely seared yellowfin tuna as the main attraction.
There's a lovely risotto peppered with rock shrimp, the dish prepared with an enviable light touch. Thin ribbons of cool cucumbers and lushly smoked salmon, dressed, pitch-perfectly, with dill, mustard and fried capers, make for a memorably good salad. My sole disappointment, seafood-wise, was a past-its-prime serving of steamed blue mussels, a surprise -- and, I'm thinking, an anomaly -- for a kitchen that is otherwise so obviously detail-obsessed.
Beyond the sea
This is not just a fish story. A couscous house in Marseilles formed the inspiration for a boldly seasoned lamb/chicken/lamb-sausage dish, with each principal ingredient braised in the ever-more-concentrated juices of its predecessor. Klein puts out a dream of a pork chop and a grilled-to-perfection steak, and anyone in a roast-chicken-and-mashed potatoes mood need look no further than the expert version put forth here.
Yes, Meritage (the name rhymes with heritage) is as flexible as a Bikram yoga practitioner. A Wild fan in search of a phenomenal burger, equally addictive French fries and an ice-cold beer will feel right at home seated next to a table of special-occasion diners, and vice versa. The bar food is superb: fantastic smoked chicken wings, hearty pork rillette and divine roasted bone marrow, both spread across spears of grilled bread, and a flatbread dressed with a can't-miss combination of caramelized onions, bits of smoky bacon and a splash of crème fraîche.
The noon-hour soup-and-salad crowd will appreciate how Klein manages to make chicken soup with matzo balls an elegant experience. He captures sweet corn's summertime essence in a velouté cleverly garnished with corn-bread croutons; in a naughty turn, a bit of bacon fat adds another flavor dimension, but keeps the dizzyingly delicious results off limits to vegetarians.
Vegetables, dessert and more
That said, Klein doesn't forget about the meatless among his customer base, and he doesn't relegate them to dreary Pasta Primaveraland, either. Instead, he selects a seasonal vegetable -- right now it's sweet corn, but a few weeks ago it was English peas -- and incorporates it into an array of cleverly packaged bite-sized dishes on a single platter.
Post-Ordway sweet-seekers can find refuge in the traditionally minded desserts, which are painstakingly executed by sous chef Jon Beyreuther. There's an airy chocolate mousse crowned with an indecently rich dollop of whipped cream and dainty profiteroles drizzled with an intense chocolate sauce, but topping the don't-miss charts is a wonderfully tangy lemon tart.
More assets: Weekend brunch is a delight, and if my employer were based in the capital city, I'd make Meritage -- and the kitchen's perfectly turned omelet of the day -- my go-to business lunch reservation. A newly installed chef's table allows Klein to indulge in tasting-menu spontaneity. The sidewalk patio, with its scenic Rice Park surroundings, and the sweep of gleaming terra cotta gorgeousness that is the Hamm Building's facade, has few peers. There's even a terrific little weekday crêpe stand, a source for an ever-changing array of both savory and sweet streetwise snacks.
That restaurants are highly collaborative enterprises is immediately evident at Meritage, where the front-of-the-house crew operates with the well rehearsed timing of a long-running Broadway play, thanks to the efforts of Desta Klein and managers Nicolas Giraud and Mark Govich. Their collective sense of hospitality, which permeates down to the staffers filling the bread baskets and answering the telephone, is a model for other restaurateurs, and a pleasure to behold.
MERITAGE ★★★★
Location: 410 St. Peter St., St. Paul, 651-222-5670, www.meritage-stpaul.com
Hours: Dining room open 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Tue.-Fri., 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Sat., 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Sun. Bar menu served to 11 p.m. Tue.-Thu., to midnight Fri.-Sat.; drinks served one hour later.
Atmosphere: A stylish, big-city bistro with a small-town heart.
Service: Polished and professional, and nary a dreaded "Are you still working on that?" Sound level: Challenging but not punishing when full.
Recommended dishes: Shrimp cocktail, bone marrow, oysters, chicken soup, couscous "Royale," striped bass, "Composition of Summer Corn," lobster in gelée, tuna taco, burger and fries, lobster roll, lemon tart.
Wine list: Extensive, but could use more moderately priced options. The forward-thinking bar approaches cocktails -- love the absinthe program -- with passion and imagination.
![]() |
| photo by Tom Wallace |
Meritage is a place where seafood is king
Article by: RICK NELSON , Star Tribune Updated: August 17, 2011 - 3:38 PM
A dazzling new oyster bar has enriched the Meritage experience
Meritage doesn't bill itself as a seafood restaurant. But that's exactly what it is, plus a whole lot more. It just might be the best of its kind in the Midwest.
Here's the back story: The downtown St. Paul restaurant, which is just shy of its fourth birthday, is located off the glorious lobby of the equally glorious Hamm Building, and when an adjacent storefront became available last year, co-owners Russell and Desta Klein wisely snapped it up. The much-needed elbow room was transformed into an oyster bar outfitted in the same style as the urbane dining room, and voila: What had been a French restaurant with a flair for seafood has become a French-accented seafood fanatic's destination. And a fantastic one, at that.
What this diner appreciates most about chef Russell Klein's work, along with his faith in downtown St. Paul, is how he skillfully finds parity between classic and contemporary, formal and casual. That culinary balancing act is best viewed through the prism of lobster -- specifically, Klein's approach to it -- because anyone who loves lobster will adore Meritage.
Purists can enjoy it steamed and chilled, wrestling it to submission while it's still in the shell. Classicists will fall all over how Klein adds just enough gelatin to a decadent lobster consommé, fills it with generous chunks of tender poached lobster, then tops it with a sweet corn purée, a flavor marriage that can only be described as celestial. It's the epitome of excess, in a gleefully good way, and when that gossamer gelée comes in contact with your tongue, it melts back into consommé, a marvelous sleight-of-hand.
Klein also makes a wicked-good workingman's lobster roll, kissing the sweet, succulent meat with bits of tarragon and celery. It's an homage to his youth on New York's Long Island, where he spent plenty of time fishing the Atlantic and nurturing his passion for seafood.
Because the Kleins have gone to the considerable effort of developing relationships with purveyors on both coasts, their raw bar is stocked with oysters rarely, if ever, seen in the Twin Cities. Along with a second-to-none selection (which also happily includes whelks, coaxed from a Maine forager), the oysters are also beautifully and skillfully presented, a rarity for this landlocked region.
There can't be a more impressive shrimp cocktail. Klein doesn't pull any punches, using ultra-jumbo shrimp that are wild-caught off Mexico's Baja coast, then gently poaching them so each bite boasts a pronounced snap; the accompanying cocktail sauce is appropriately lively. Earlier this year, my favorite seat in the house was at the zinc-topped bar, where I indulged, guilt-free, in my hunger for sweet, unadulterated crab.
Even something so familiar as raw tuna gets the velvet glove treatment, tossing it with a feisty combination of ginger juice and a Sriracha-laced mayonnaise before spooning it into crunchy taro-root taco shells. They're $3.50 a pop, one of a half-dozen flirtatious little "amusements" -- don't miss the refreshing gazpacho, or the heart-attack-inducing duck liver pâté -- and limiting yourself to one is close to impossible.
Several entrees on the current menu are showcases for both seafood and Klein's considerable skills. He's at the top of his form with a riff on bouillabaisse, with a little ratatouille thrown in for good measure. It pays tribute to iconic French dishes while inserting a modern American interpretation, with crisp-skinned wild striped bass surrounded by a finely calibrated flurry of tastes. Ditto a reinvented Nicoise salad, with braised escarole pinch-hitting for fresh greens and velvety, barely seared yellowfin tuna as the main attraction.
There's a lovely risotto peppered with rock shrimp, the dish prepared with an enviable light touch. Thin ribbons of cool cucumbers and lushly smoked salmon, dressed, pitch-perfectly, with dill, mustard and fried capers, make for a memorably good salad. My sole disappointment, seafood-wise, was a past-its-prime serving of steamed blue mussels, a surprise -- and, I'm thinking, an anomaly -- for a kitchen that is otherwise so obviously detail-obsessed.
Beyond the sea
This is not just a fish story. A couscous house in Marseilles formed the inspiration for a boldly seasoned lamb/chicken/lamb-sausage dish, with each principal ingredient braised in the ever-more-concentrated juices of its predecessor. Klein puts out a dream of a pork chop and a grilled-to-perfection steak, and anyone in a roast-chicken-and-mashed potatoes mood need look no further than the expert version put forth here.
Yes, Meritage (the name rhymes with heritage) is as flexible as a Bikram yoga practitioner. A Wild fan in search of a phenomenal burger, equally addictive French fries and an ice-cold beer will feel right at home seated next to a table of special-occasion diners, and vice versa. The bar food is superb: fantastic smoked chicken wings, hearty pork rillette and divine roasted bone marrow, both spread across spears of grilled bread, and a flatbread dressed with a can't-miss combination of caramelized onions, bits of smoky bacon and a splash of crème fraîche.
The noon-hour soup-and-salad crowd will appreciate how Klein manages to make chicken soup with matzo balls an elegant experience. He captures sweet corn's summertime essence in a velouté cleverly garnished with corn-bread croutons; in a naughty turn, a bit of bacon fat adds another flavor dimension, but keeps the dizzyingly delicious results off limits to vegetarians.
Vegetables, dessert and more
That said, Klein doesn't forget about the meatless among his customer base, and he doesn't relegate them to dreary Pasta Primaveraland, either. Instead, he selects a seasonal vegetable -- right now it's sweet corn, but a few weeks ago it was English peas -- and incorporates it into an array of cleverly packaged bite-sized dishes on a single platter.
Post-Ordway sweet-seekers can find refuge in the traditionally minded desserts, which are painstakingly executed by sous chef Jon Beyreuther. There's an airy chocolate mousse crowned with an indecently rich dollop of whipped cream and dainty profiteroles drizzled with an intense chocolate sauce, but topping the don't-miss charts is a wonderfully tangy lemon tart.
More assets: Weekend brunch is a delight, and if my employer were based in the capital city, I'd make Meritage -- and the kitchen's perfectly turned omelet of the day -- my go-to business lunch reservation. A newly installed chef's table allows Klein to indulge in tasting-menu spontaneity. The sidewalk patio, with its scenic Rice Park surroundings, and the sweep of gleaming terra cotta gorgeousness that is the Hamm Building's facade, has few peers. There's even a terrific little weekday crêpe stand, a source for an ever-changing array of both savory and sweet streetwise snacks.
That restaurants are highly collaborative enterprises is immediately evident at Meritage, where the front-of-the-house crew operates with the well rehearsed timing of a long-running Broadway play, thanks to the efforts of Desta Klein and managers Nicolas Giraud and Mark Govich. Their collective sense of hospitality, which permeates down to the staffers filling the bread baskets and answering the telephone, is a model for other restaurateurs, and a pleasure to behold.
MERITAGE ★★★★
Location: 410 St. Peter St., St. Paul, 651-222-5670, www.meritage-stpaul.com
Hours: Dining room open 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Tue.-Fri., 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Sat., 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Sun. Bar menu served to 11 p.m. Tue.-Thu., to midnight Fri.-Sat.; drinks served one hour later.
Atmosphere: A stylish, big-city bistro with a small-town heart.
Service: Polished and professional, and nary a dreaded "Are you still working on that?" Sound level: Challenging but not punishing when full.
Recommended dishes: Shrimp cocktail, bone marrow, oysters, chicken soup, couscous "Royale," striped bass, "Composition of Summer Corn," lobster in gelée, tuna taco, burger and fries, lobster roll, lemon tart.
Wine list: Extensive, but could use more moderately priced options. The forward-thinking bar approaches cocktails -- love the absinthe program -- with passion and imagination.
Lunds Downtown Groundbreaking Sept 1!
It's official and at Shea, we're excited to be a part of it! Check out the announcement from The Journal:
Lunds groundbreaking set for Sept. 1
August 17, 2011, 11:12am
By Sarah McKenzie, The Journal
The groundbreaking of the highly anticipated Lunds grocery store at 12th & Hennepin is set for Sept. 1.
City Council Member Lisa Goodman (7th Ward) and Tres Lund, CEO of Lund Food Holdings, will make remarks at the ceremony planned for 11:30 a.m.–1 p.m. There will be a complimentary lunch of brats, hotdogs, chips and watermelon.
The new Lunds, set to open next summer, will be about 20,000 square feet. A 5,600-square-foot Lunds Wine Market will open next to the store at 1208 Harmon Ave.
Lunds groundbreaking set for Sept. 1
August 17, 2011, 11:12am
By Sarah McKenzie, The Journal
The groundbreaking of the highly anticipated Lunds grocery store at 12th & Hennepin is set for Sept. 1.
City Council Member Lisa Goodman (7th Ward) and Tres Lund, CEO of Lund Food Holdings, will make remarks at the ceremony planned for 11:30 a.m.–1 p.m. There will be a complimentary lunch of brats, hotdogs, chips and watermelon.
The new Lunds, set to open next summer, will be about 20,000 square feet. A 5,600-square-foot Lunds Wine Market will open next to the store at 1208 Harmon Ave.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Mill Valley Kitchen on KARE 11
Our friends from Mill Valley Kitchen were featured this weekend on KARE 11. On the program, Chef Mike Rakun prepares seabass for Belinda (and they even sneak in some shots of the awesome interior of the restaurant.) As Belinda mentions, people seem to really like the fact that MVK posts nutrition information right on the menu. If you haven't been, you should go check it out and let us know what you think. This video will make you hungry for sure!
Sunday, August 14, 2011
Shea at the OIGA Conference this week.
This week, Shea is proud to be participating in the Oklahoma Indian Gaming Association (OIGA) Conference, an event with over 2,500 industry professionals from all over the country attending this premier event specifically devoted to all aspects of the Indian Gaming industry. On Wednesday, August 17, David Shea will be teaming up with David Rittvo of Innovation Food & Beverage and Charles Lawrence of Ovations Food Services on a presentation called "Making the Most of Your Food and Beverage: a discussion about current trends, operations and design." For more information on the conference, visit: http://www.okindiangaming.org/conference.html
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
Congrats to Black Sheep Pizza
We just caught this little blurb in the Star Tribune about our buddies over at Black Sheep Pizza. We recently helped them with the launch of their second location in St. Paul and couldn't be more proud to be associated. Congrats to Jordan and everyone at Black Sheep Pizza!!
Black Sheep rated among nation's best pizzas
Paul Walsh, Star Tribune
The Food Network is out with its top pizza choices nationwide, and a pie maker with two Twin Cities locales ranks among the best.
Black Sheep Pizza, with outlets in the Minneapolis Warehouse District and downtown St. Paul, comes in at No. 7. The network chose one restaurant for each state and then ranked them.
"Chef-owner Jordan Smith takes advantage of his setup to create super-crisp crusts that stay crunchy no matter what he puts on them," the network notes.
Smith's tastiest pie, the critique continues, is a sauce-free pizza with oyster mushrooms, smoked mozzarella, ricotta, rosemary and shaved garlic.
![]() |
| photo by Tom Wallace, Star Tribune |
Paul Walsh, Star Tribune
The Food Network is out with its top pizza choices nationwide, and a pie maker with two Twin Cities locales ranks among the best.
Black Sheep Pizza, with outlets in the Minneapolis Warehouse District and downtown St. Paul, comes in at No. 7. The network chose one restaurant for each state and then ranked them.
"Chef-owner Jordan Smith takes advantage of his setup to create super-crisp crusts that stay crunchy no matter what he puts on them," the network notes.
Smith's tastiest pie, the critique continues, is a sauce-free pizza with oyster mushrooms, smoked mozzarella, ricotta, rosemary and shaved garlic.
Heavy Table visits Saffron
Just a few short weeks ago, Shea worked with Saffron on a refresh of the bar and dining room, adding some softer, more casual touches with subtle Moroccan and Mediterranean influences. The restaurant reemerged with a revamp of the menu as well, and Jill Lewis took an in-depth look at Saffron for Heavy Table. You can find her high praises here, but be careful....it will likely make you really hungry:
Saffron in the Minneapolis Warehouse District
by Jill Lewis on August 9, 2011
Two restaurants straddle either side of North Third Street between First and Second avenues in downtown Minneapolis. On the north side is 112 Eatery, with a kitchen run by a James Beard Award-winning chef and accolades from everyone from The New York Times to your mother. It’s routinely singled out for its sophisticated yet affordable cuisine and is on the must-try list of every foodie in town.
Or so I’ve heard. I’ve never eaten there.
With a menu that features a pork product in at least half of its dishes — and shellfish in many of the remaining — I, a Jew who doesn’t eat either of those foods, don’t have much left to choose, and so I’ve never been. But don’t cry for me, Twin Cities. The restaurant on the south side of North Third, Saffron, is the answer to my pork-free prayers. And it’s no consolation prize — the top-notch Middle Eastern and Mediterranean food that graces the warm and vibrant dining room rivals the best dishes coming out of any area kitchen, and they back up my long-standing argument that you don’t need proscuitto or lardons to create a winning meal.
Chef Sameh Wadi, whose Muslim beliefs inform his decision to keep pork off his menu, instead has homed in on the flavors and spices that make the food from this region simultaneously exotic and comforting. Gently cooked vegetables, fragrant sauces, and tender meats benefit from a squeeze of lemon, a sprinkle of garlic, or a blend of fiery peppers. A dab of yogurt or a shower of coriander seeds can do as much for a dish as a crumbled slice of pancetta. With each bite you can taste the love and layers of flavor that generations of cooks have perfected — and Wadi has updated them for the present.
A recent overhaul of the menu has led to a new focus on mezze (small plates), and you’d be smart to start off your meal with a bunch of them. Perhaps the hummus (above left, $6 plain / $8-9 with toppings) doesn’t tempt you due to its ubiquity these days, but don’t overlook it. This hummus is the real deal — light, lemony, and bursting with freshness. That pasty puree you buy at the grocery store shouldn’t even be mentioned in the same breath at Saffron’s hummus. For an extra treat, top it with bastirma, silky, house-cured beef that offers a slightly salty contrast to the smooth hummus. Or, if you insist on skipping the hummus, order the charred fresh chickpeas (above right, $6), which you squeeze out of the pods like edamame, capturing the bits of lemon juice and sea salt with each slurp. The starters match beautifully with the non-alcoholic refreshments ($4.50) on the drinks menu — go for the Blood & Fire with watermelon and cucumber, or a Moroccan Chiller with mango, pineapple, orange, hibiscus, and orange blossom water.
A taste of Spain comes in the form of chicken and mushroom croquettes ($6), which win you over with their crispy shell and warm, umami-rich filling. Greece shows up as grilled haloumi cheese ($5) sandwiched between thick cubes of watermelon and a sprinkle of mint. The bready cheese features a tasty layer of char atop a crumbly, salty interior, providing a pleasing contrast to the sweet, juicy melon and cool mint. The crispy potato chips ($5) are addictive enough on their own, but the addition of za’tar yogurt and piquillo pepper sauce give your tongue a hot-and-cold roller-coaster ride that takes the chips over the top. If you’d rather steer clear of the fryer, the slow cooked green beans ($6) satisfy with a spicy tomato sauce that may cause you to reach for your cocktail a few extra times (try the Saffron Rose with gin, saffron, rose water, and sparkling rosé) but still leaves you wanting more.
The salads, apps, and sides section of the menu offers a little something for everyone. For those who are really missing their pork, substitute a lamb BLT ($8) with lamb bacon, saffron-tomato jam, and arugula on vanilla egg bread. Though the bacon isn’t crispy, as I’ve heard all good bacon should be, it is richly seasoned and meets its match with the sweet, meaty jam. The watermelon and heirloom tomato salad ($8) gets its kicks from charred jalapeño and then relief from the smooth cow’s-milk feta. Feta also makes an appearance — dehydrated, no less — sprinkled atop the grilled corn ($5), giving it an additional layer of crunch along with the zing of the ras el hanout seasoning. The snap of the sweet corn contrasts beautifully with the soft, pillowy interior of the coriander potatoes ($7), which, when swirled with the roasted tomatoes and caramelized paprika butter, create a silky sensation in your mouth.
With so many appealing choices on the top half of the menu, it’s a wonder many diners make it to the bottom half, which features the full-size entrées. But you’ll want to save room for the duck leg tagine ($27), bolstered by preserved lemons, olives, raisins, potatoes, and saffron. This traditional, slow-cooked Moroccan dish boasts tender, perfumed meat that you hardly have to chew — but you’ll want to so you can savor every mouthful of duck, potato, and sauce. A more decadent choice would be the sautéed Parisian gnocchi swimming in a black-truffle taleggio fondue ($18). Using the word “rich” to describe that cheese sauce is almost an understatement — it’s a good thing those delicate summer vegetables, like bite-size artichoke hearts, are there to lighten up each bite of toothsome dumplings.
Even if you don’t have enough room for an entrée, you should squeeze in some dessert before you depart. Otherwise, you’ll miss out on chocolate ganache cake ($8) with flavors so dark that you might be converted from milk chocolate forever. A dusting of coffee and a small scoop of vanilla ice cream provide all the sweet and spice you need for a well-rounded dessert. You may be intrigued by the olive oil couscous cake ($7), and it’s a great excuse to break out of your dessert rut. The moist, delicately flavored cake is the ideal base for sweet pineapple and yogurt sorbet, and the few spoonfuls of berries complete the dish with their juicy, jammy bite. If somehow you do find yourself with more than just a few bites left in you, order the blueberry and peach trifle ($7), which layers vanilla-baked peaches and blueberry-hibiscus preserves with a soft lemon cake, candied ginger cream, and a crunchy topping of rice krispy clusters. The baked peaches are still firm and act as a pleasing counterpart to the plush cake and syrupy blueberries. Pair with a soft sherry or sweet muscat, and you’ll linger so long that the tick of your parking meter is the only signal that any time has passed at all.
Pork, schmork — Saffron proves you don’t need anything porcine to make a first-class meal. With a chef like Wadi at the helm, a welcoming, generous, and knowledgeable staff (my gluten-free dining companion was impressed by the care with which our waiter walked her through the menu), and a delightful, inviting decor (gone are the white tablecloths of yore), Saffron is a gem of a restaurant that has earned every bit of its praise. You can keep your bacon and pork belly — I’ll be sticking to the south side of North Third Street and enjoying every bite.
BEST BET: The hummus with bastirma ($9) should be the first thing everyone orders, with the duck leg tagine ($7) coming in second.
Saffron
Middle Eastern / Mediterranean in the Warehouse District
124 N Third St
Minneapolis, MN 55401
612.746.5533
HOURS:
Mon-Thurs 5-10pm
Sat-Sun 5-11pm
Happy hour Mon-Fri 4-6pm
CHEF / OWNER: Sameh Wadi
RESERVATIONS / RECOMMENDED: Yes/ On weekends
BAR: Full
VEGETARIAN / VEGAN: Yes / Some mezze
ENTREE PRICE: $18-29 for entrées, $5-9 for mezze
Saffron in the Minneapolis Warehouse District
by Jill Lewis on August 9, 2011
![]() |
| photo by Beth Dilley / Heavy Table |
Or so I’ve heard. I’ve never eaten there.
With a menu that features a pork product in at least half of its dishes — and shellfish in many of the remaining — I, a Jew who doesn’t eat either of those foods, don’t have much left to choose, and so I’ve never been. But don’t cry for me, Twin Cities. The restaurant on the south side of North Third, Saffron, is the answer to my pork-free prayers. And it’s no consolation prize — the top-notch Middle Eastern and Mediterranean food that graces the warm and vibrant dining room rivals the best dishes coming out of any area kitchen, and they back up my long-standing argument that you don’t need proscuitto or lardons to create a winning meal.
Chef Sameh Wadi, whose Muslim beliefs inform his decision to keep pork off his menu, instead has homed in on the flavors and spices that make the food from this region simultaneously exotic and comforting. Gently cooked vegetables, fragrant sauces, and tender meats benefit from a squeeze of lemon, a sprinkle of garlic, or a blend of fiery peppers. A dab of yogurt or a shower of coriander seeds can do as much for a dish as a crumbled slice of pancetta. With each bite you can taste the love and layers of flavor that generations of cooks have perfected — and Wadi has updated them for the present.
A recent overhaul of the menu has led to a new focus on mezze (small plates), and you’d be smart to start off your meal with a bunch of them. Perhaps the hummus (above left, $6 plain / $8-9 with toppings) doesn’t tempt you due to its ubiquity these days, but don’t overlook it. This hummus is the real deal — light, lemony, and bursting with freshness. That pasty puree you buy at the grocery store shouldn’t even be mentioned in the same breath at Saffron’s hummus. For an extra treat, top it with bastirma, silky, house-cured beef that offers a slightly salty contrast to the smooth hummus. Or, if you insist on skipping the hummus, order the charred fresh chickpeas (above right, $6), which you squeeze out of the pods like edamame, capturing the bits of lemon juice and sea salt with each slurp. The starters match beautifully with the non-alcoholic refreshments ($4.50) on the drinks menu — go for the Blood & Fire with watermelon and cucumber, or a Moroccan Chiller with mango, pineapple, orange, hibiscus, and orange blossom water.
A taste of Spain comes in the form of chicken and mushroom croquettes ($6), which win you over with their crispy shell and warm, umami-rich filling. Greece shows up as grilled haloumi cheese ($5) sandwiched between thick cubes of watermelon and a sprinkle of mint. The bready cheese features a tasty layer of char atop a crumbly, salty interior, providing a pleasing contrast to the sweet, juicy melon and cool mint. The crispy potato chips ($5) are addictive enough on their own, but the addition of za’tar yogurt and piquillo pepper sauce give your tongue a hot-and-cold roller-coaster ride that takes the chips over the top. If you’d rather steer clear of the fryer, the slow cooked green beans ($6) satisfy with a spicy tomato sauce that may cause you to reach for your cocktail a few extra times (try the Saffron Rose with gin, saffron, rose water, and sparkling rosé) but still leaves you wanting more.
The salads, apps, and sides section of the menu offers a little something for everyone. For those who are really missing their pork, substitute a lamb BLT ($8) with lamb bacon, saffron-tomato jam, and arugula on vanilla egg bread. Though the bacon isn’t crispy, as I’ve heard all good bacon should be, it is richly seasoned and meets its match with the sweet, meaty jam. The watermelon and heirloom tomato salad ($8) gets its kicks from charred jalapeño and then relief from the smooth cow’s-milk feta. Feta also makes an appearance — dehydrated, no less — sprinkled atop the grilled corn ($5), giving it an additional layer of crunch along with the zing of the ras el hanout seasoning. The snap of the sweet corn contrasts beautifully with the soft, pillowy interior of the coriander potatoes ($7), which, when swirled with the roasted tomatoes and caramelized paprika butter, create a silky sensation in your mouth.
With so many appealing choices on the top half of the menu, it’s a wonder many diners make it to the bottom half, which features the full-size entrées. But you’ll want to save room for the duck leg tagine ($27), bolstered by preserved lemons, olives, raisins, potatoes, and saffron. This traditional, slow-cooked Moroccan dish boasts tender, perfumed meat that you hardly have to chew — but you’ll want to so you can savor every mouthful of duck, potato, and sauce. A more decadent choice would be the sautéed Parisian gnocchi swimming in a black-truffle taleggio fondue ($18). Using the word “rich” to describe that cheese sauce is almost an understatement — it’s a good thing those delicate summer vegetables, like bite-size artichoke hearts, are there to lighten up each bite of toothsome dumplings.
Even if you don’t have enough room for an entrée, you should squeeze in some dessert before you depart. Otherwise, you’ll miss out on chocolate ganache cake ($8) with flavors so dark that you might be converted from milk chocolate forever. A dusting of coffee and a small scoop of vanilla ice cream provide all the sweet and spice you need for a well-rounded dessert. You may be intrigued by the olive oil couscous cake ($7), and it’s a great excuse to break out of your dessert rut. The moist, delicately flavored cake is the ideal base for sweet pineapple and yogurt sorbet, and the few spoonfuls of berries complete the dish with their juicy, jammy bite. If somehow you do find yourself with more than just a few bites left in you, order the blueberry and peach trifle ($7), which layers vanilla-baked peaches and blueberry-hibiscus preserves with a soft lemon cake, candied ginger cream, and a crunchy topping of rice krispy clusters. The baked peaches are still firm and act as a pleasing counterpart to the plush cake and syrupy blueberries. Pair with a soft sherry or sweet muscat, and you’ll linger so long that the tick of your parking meter is the only signal that any time has passed at all.
Pork, schmork — Saffron proves you don’t need anything porcine to make a first-class meal. With a chef like Wadi at the helm, a welcoming, generous, and knowledgeable staff (my gluten-free dining companion was impressed by the care with which our waiter walked her through the menu), and a delightful, inviting decor (gone are the white tablecloths of yore), Saffron is a gem of a restaurant that has earned every bit of its praise. You can keep your bacon and pork belly — I’ll be sticking to the south side of North Third Street and enjoying every bite.
BEST BET: The hummus with bastirma ($9) should be the first thing everyone orders, with the duck leg tagine ($7) coming in second.
Saffron
Middle Eastern / Mediterranean in the Warehouse District
124 N Third St
Minneapolis, MN 55401
612.746.5533
HOURS:
Mon-Thurs 5-10pm
Sat-Sun 5-11pm
Happy hour Mon-Fri 4-6pm
CHEF / OWNER: Sameh Wadi
RESERVATIONS / RECOMMENDED: Yes/ On weekends
BAR: Full
VEGETARIAN / VEGAN: Yes / Some mezze
ENTREE PRICE: $18-29 for entrées, $5-9 for mezze
NRN Hot Concept: Crave
Last week, Nation's Restaurant News announced its picks for the 2011 Hot Concepts award winners, and one of Shea's favorite client concepts, Crave, made the cut. This week, the magazine is spotlighting each of the five winners, and today Crave was the feature. Check it out below:
Hot Concepts! 2011: Crave
Casual chain weathers recession with upscale touches, value focus
August 2, 2011
By Mark Brandau
Last week, NRN introduced the 2011 Hot Concepts! award winners. The Hot Concepts! awards are given each year by Nation’s Restaurant News to young, growing chains that embody the perseverance and entrepreneurial spirit of the restaurant industry. This week, find out more about each of the five concepts who were able to identify and capitalize upon opportunities in their markets across varying cuisine, service style and formality. Today's winner spotlight is on Crave.
Concept snapshot
Concept name: Crave Restaurant
Owner: Crave Restaurant
Headquarters: Bloomington, Minn.
Year founded: 2007
Segment: upscale casual
No. of units: 6
States where located: Minnesota, Florida, Nebraska
Systemwide sales: undisclosed
Average unit volume: more than $6 million
Average check: $24-$25
Target markets: eastern states, particularly Florida
Method of growth/funding: private
Vision: an upscale-casual American chain incorporating the “tremendous evolution” of sushi
Kam Talebi, founder and chief executive of Bloomington, Minn.-based Crave, could not have foreseen the worldwide economic downturn that metastasized months after he opened the first location of his upscale-casual chain in 2007. But what he did correctly predict at the time — a “tremendous evolution” of sushi in the marketplace — allowed the chain to thrive in the challenging years that followed, he said.
Crave, which incorporates sushi into its extensive menu of seasonal American dishes, now has six units in three states and has grown average unit volume every year since it opened. Talebi did not share systemwide sales figures, but said average unit volume is “north of $6 million.”
“[Generally speaking], it would be challenging to build a business model that incorporated sushi into American, but it’s in our blood,” Talebi said. “Given the complete nature of what we wanted to create — an upscale-casual concept with the element of a full bar and wine program, and a concept geared more toward the female demographic — sushi was a perfect fit.”
That first location went into the Galleria mall in Edina, Minn., an affluent suburb of the Twin Cities. The mall’s 70-percent-female customer base was just the venue Crave needed to test out its concept, which aimed to balance serving adults with sushi and a wine program while also catering to families.
“We wanted to make sure we were family friendly and that we appeal to a mass audience, but that we’re not generic in nature or in the quality of our food,” Talebi said. “Fine dining was becoming a dinosaur, and we saw that coming in 2007. We wanted a menu that was approachable.”
Crave built three more locations in the Minneapolis market and expanded into Orlando, Fla., and Omaha, Neb., which Talebi calls a “real sleeper market.”
The diverse menu required of any upscale-casual brand — Crave offers filets and New York strips for the expense-account diner trading down from the steakhouse, as well as pizza and pasta for a family celebrating a child’s birthday — gives customers points of entry at different price tiers, Talebi said. The restaurant’s average check is $24 to $25.
“It’s a wide range, but we’re committed to quality,” he said. “Yes, we run the risk of higher food costs, but I’d rather invest in the food than a marketing campaign. The food sells itself and the concept, and our customers promote the concept.”
A focus on value and engaging restaurant decor also help drive traffic, Talebi said. Lunch specials of a half-sandwich, a personal pizza or a sushi bento box plus a side for $9.95 provide an accessible price point, as do $3 to $5 happy-hour bar bites.
“During the recession we were able to get the customer to trade up from Applebee’s or Ruby Tuesday for just $5 more,” he said. “We tried to make the restaurant chic and vibrant, and we got corporate customers to come down from Morton’s or Capital Grille and walk away with the same experience.”
Because Crave devotes equal space to the dining room and the bar area, with a floor-to-ceiling wine tower separating the two, one guest could come back several times to entertain her family, her clients or herself, Talebi added.
“Depending on where you are in the restaurant, you get a different experience,” he said. “That’s what makes our customers repeat visitors.”
Talebi wants to work his way east with Crave’s expansion, with a particular interest in Florida. For 2012, one location is slated for the Midwest, and two will go up in the Northeast, he said.
“I’m privately held, and I don’t have to grow a certain number of units per year,” he said. “I look for the right opportunities and let that drive our growth.”
Hot Concepts! 2011: Crave
Casual chain weathers recession with upscale touches, value focus
August 2, 2011
By Mark Brandau
Last week, NRN introduced the 2011 Hot Concepts! award winners. The Hot Concepts! awards are given each year by Nation’s Restaurant News to young, growing chains that embody the perseverance and entrepreneurial spirit of the restaurant industry. This week, find out more about each of the five concepts who were able to identify and capitalize upon opportunities in their markets across varying cuisine, service style and formality. Today's winner spotlight is on Crave.
Concept snapshot
Concept name: Crave Restaurant
Owner: Crave Restaurant
Headquarters: Bloomington, Minn.
Year founded: 2007
Segment: upscale casual
No. of units: 6
States where located: Minnesota, Florida, Nebraska
Systemwide sales: undisclosed
Average unit volume: more than $6 million
Average check: $24-$25
Target markets: eastern states, particularly Florida
Method of growth/funding: private
Vision: an upscale-casual American chain incorporating the “tremendous evolution” of sushi
Kam Talebi, founder and chief executive of Bloomington, Minn.-based Crave, could not have foreseen the worldwide economic downturn that metastasized months after he opened the first location of his upscale-casual chain in 2007. But what he did correctly predict at the time — a “tremendous evolution” of sushi in the marketplace — allowed the chain to thrive in the challenging years that followed, he said.
Crave, which incorporates sushi into its extensive menu of seasonal American dishes, now has six units in three states and has grown average unit volume every year since it opened. Talebi did not share systemwide sales figures, but said average unit volume is “north of $6 million.”
“[Generally speaking], it would be challenging to build a business model that incorporated sushi into American, but it’s in our blood,” Talebi said. “Given the complete nature of what we wanted to create — an upscale-casual concept with the element of a full bar and wine program, and a concept geared more toward the female demographic — sushi was a perfect fit.”
That first location went into the Galleria mall in Edina, Minn., an affluent suburb of the Twin Cities. The mall’s 70-percent-female customer base was just the venue Crave needed to test out its concept, which aimed to balance serving adults with sushi and a wine program while also catering to families.
“We wanted to make sure we were family friendly and that we appeal to a mass audience, but that we’re not generic in nature or in the quality of our food,” Talebi said. “Fine dining was becoming a dinosaur, and we saw that coming in 2007. We wanted a menu that was approachable.”
Crave built three more locations in the Minneapolis market and expanded into Orlando, Fla., and Omaha, Neb., which Talebi calls a “real sleeper market.”
The diverse menu required of any upscale-casual brand — Crave offers filets and New York strips for the expense-account diner trading down from the steakhouse, as well as pizza and pasta for a family celebrating a child’s birthday — gives customers points of entry at different price tiers, Talebi said. The restaurant’s average check is $24 to $25.
“It’s a wide range, but we’re committed to quality,” he said. “Yes, we run the risk of higher food costs, but I’d rather invest in the food than a marketing campaign. The food sells itself and the concept, and our customers promote the concept.”
A focus on value and engaging restaurant decor also help drive traffic, Talebi said. Lunch specials of a half-sandwich, a personal pizza or a sushi bento box plus a side for $9.95 provide an accessible price point, as do $3 to $5 happy-hour bar bites.
“During the recession we were able to get the customer to trade up from Applebee’s or Ruby Tuesday for just $5 more,” he said. “We tried to make the restaurant chic and vibrant, and we got corporate customers to come down from Morton’s or Capital Grille and walk away with the same experience.”
Because Crave devotes equal space to the dining room and the bar area, with a floor-to-ceiling wine tower separating the two, one guest could come back several times to entertain her family, her clients or herself, Talebi added.
“Depending on where you are in the restaurant, you get a different experience,” he said. “That’s what makes our customers repeat visitors.”
Talebi wants to work his way east with Crave’s expansion, with a particular interest in Florida. For 2012, one location is slated for the Midwest, and two will go up in the Northeast, he said.
“I’m privately held, and I don’t have to grow a certain number of units per year,” he said. “I look for the right opportunities and let that drive our growth.”
Wednesday, August 3, 2011
Crave named a 2011 Hot Concept by NRN magazine!
Congrats to Crave on being named a 2011 Hot Concept. We are proud to have been a part of the Crave design team since its inception at Galleria in 2008. Read the announcement below from the Mpls. St. Paul Business Journal, which contains a link to the article in Nation's Restaurant News:
Crave restaurant named a Hot Concepts! Award winner
Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal - by Ed Stych
Wednesday, August 3, 2011, 1:44pm CDT
Crave has been named one of Nation's Restaurant News' (NRN) five 2011 Hot Concepts! Award winners.
Minneapolis-based Crave, which opened its latest location in downtown Minneapolis earlier this year, will be honored at the 52nd Multi-Unit Foodservice Operators Conference in Grapevine, Texas, Sept. 25-27.
The Hot Concepts! award recognizes "forward-thinking companies with emerging growth potential that appeal to consumers and position themselves at the leading edge of the foodservice industry," the NRN website said.
NRN likes that Crave features American seasonal cuisine, a big wine list and has a focus on sushi that helps attract women to the restaurants.
Crave is projecting $38 million in sales this year and $60 million next year, NRN reported. The chain expects to add three or four locations a year.
Crave has locations in Minneapolis, the Galleria in Edina, the Shops at West End in St. Louis Park, the Mall of America Mall of America in Bloomington, Orlando, Fla. and Omaha, Neb.
>Click here to read the story.
![]() |
| Crave's downtown Minneapolis location's rooftop deck. |
Crave restaurant named a Hot Concepts! Award winner
Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal - by Ed Stych
Wednesday, August 3, 2011, 1:44pm CDT
Crave has been named one of Nation's Restaurant News' (NRN) five 2011 Hot Concepts! Award winners.
Minneapolis-based Crave, which opened its latest location in downtown Minneapolis earlier this year, will be honored at the 52nd Multi-Unit Foodservice Operators Conference in Grapevine, Texas, Sept. 25-27.
The Hot Concepts! award recognizes "forward-thinking companies with emerging growth potential that appeal to consumers and position themselves at the leading edge of the foodservice industry," the NRN website said.
NRN likes that Crave features American seasonal cuisine, a big wine list and has a focus on sushi that helps attract women to the restaurants.
Crave is projecting $38 million in sales this year and $60 million next year, NRN reported. The chain expects to add three or four locations a year.
Crave has locations in Minneapolis, the Galleria in Edina, the Shops at West End in St. Louis Park, the Mall of America Mall of America in Bloomington, Orlando, Fla. and Omaha, Neb.
>Click here to read the story.
Monday, August 1, 2011
David Shea talks to the Strib about the restaurant boom
Restaurant boom trickles down
Sometimes starry-eyed entrepreneurs don't think of important things when looking for a location, such as exhaust systems and ductwork.
Article by: DON JACOBSON , Special to the Star Tribune Updated: July 31, 2011 - 2:21 PM
The restaurant industry is in an upswing both in the Twin Cities and around the country, with investments pouring in, people being hired and entrepreneurs dreaming big, according to local real estate and other professionals who make the new dining spots happen.
The upsurge is proving fruitful for construction crews, architects and real estate brokers in a generally slow-growth economic environment -- not to mention the staffs of chefs and servers needed to cater to the growing crowds of diners.
Seasonally adjusted figures compiled by the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development indicate that in June there were 158,500 people employed in the Twin Cities' leisure and hospitality industries, which include restaurants -- a 4,300-worker jump from June 2010.
Plenty of entrepreneurs, attracted to the restaurant industry's glamour, are coming forward with plans to convert vacant real estate into the latest hot concept. But beware, industry experts say -- the costs of opening a new eatery can quickly get out of control and profits suffer if utmost care isn't taken in the planning stage.
One of the most active local construction firms in the Twin Cities' restaurant field is Zeman Construction Co., of Golden Valley, which has performed build-out work for such eateries as Pizza Luce, Doolittles Woodfire Grill and the Loring Kitchen & Bar.
Zeman project manager David Kalogerson says his firm is getting a steady flow of restaurant work at a time when things in many other parts of the construction industry are slow at best.
He warned, however, that despite the boom restaurateurs must make smart choices at the beginning of the process about where to locate, and he's talking more than just cities and blocks. The location will largely dictate the size of the investment they will have to make in the "back-of-the-room" equipment, and thus play a big role in the enterprise's future profitability.
"The biggest cost item they usually have to deal with is the hood exhaust and the fresh air supply into the kitchen," he said. "If you're cooking food, you have to install welded, fireproof exhaust systems that can be very costly, especially if you choose to locate in a building that's higher than a single story."
That was the case with two of Zeman's clients -- the Loring Kitchen & Bar and the soon-to-open Zen Box Izakaya Japanese Pub & Kitchen in the Mill District City Apartments, Kalogerson said. Both needed to have shafts constructed from their spaces through the upper floors of their buildings to the roof, then have fire-rated ductwork lowered through the opening with a crane.
"Most restaurant owners aren't aware of the special kind of ductwork they're going to need and that can really hurt the pocketbook if it's not addressed at the start," he said.
Also feeling the upsurge in the restaurant industry is Minneapolis-based Shea Inc., which does architecture and interior design, marketing and planning work for new restaurants around the country.
Founder David Shea said his firm is doing restaurant work in 20 states and that the sector is indeed booming in most places, including the Twin Cities, where he has recently worked with two new eateries: the Mill Valley Kitchen in St. Louis Park and Masu Sushi & Robata on East Hennepin Avenue in Minneapolis.
The restaurant boom, he said, has attracted people "with stars in their eyes" who have romantic notions about how much fun it would be to run a popular restaurant while also raking in profits. Many of them, he said, have no idea of the start-up costs that need to be taken into account.
"Where's the trash going to be located? Where will the coolers go and what about the exhaust? People don't even think about things like that and instead concentrate on the 'pretty stuff' in the front of the room," Shea said.
Forty percent of a restaurant's costs are its mechanical systems, without which "none of the pretty stuff will work," he said, adding that locations need to be chosen not just because they're appealing aesthetically, but also because they work from construction-cost and marketing standpoints.
"I'm a businessperson first, and when you're spending up to $350 per square foot for a build-out on a place, you darn well should think about those things."
"It's very expensive to open a restaurant and sometimes you can get in, you open and you find yourself undercapitalized," added Andrea Christensen, a retail broker and vice president with Cassidy Turley who specializes in matching restaurant entrepreneurs with the right space.
She said miscalculations about the up-front expenses of a new eatery can lead to a series of cost-cutting measures later on that can put it permanently behind the eight ball.
"You can get behind on your liquor taxes, then you can get in trouble with your vendors and you start losing your good servers. Once a restaurant goes into a downward spiral like that, it's hard to turn it around."
Because banks are still reluctant to lend to restaurant entrepreneurs, they usually rely on "angel" investments from individuals to fund their start-up costs. And like early-stage venture capitalists in medical devices or software, those investors stand to make healthy returns if their bets turn out to be big winners.
But, Christensen cautioned, restaurateurs need to be aware that such investors usually want to be "silent" and aren't interested in follow-on infusions of cash should the eatery struggle.
"These backers usually invest everything they can afford to lose right at the start," she said. "They don't want to be on the lease or to be put at further risk."
Don Jacobson is a St. Paul-based freelance writer.
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