(It's important to note the title suggestion I received from my editor Andrew -
"I'm obsessed and may need clinical help")
By what merits do we call something exceptional or extraordinary? Ideas of perfection seem always to be subjective. Perfection, like beauty, is found in the eye of the beholder. That being said, I’d like to assert that I have found perfection, the crème de la crème, the best of the best, the very thing that should be the standard by which all challengers should be compared to and to which all contenders should aspire to be.
That standard of perfection?
A restaurant (the other is my mama, and you can read that post here).
Juniper & Ivy, your name should be listed as the synonym for perfection in every foodie’s thesaurus.
Juniper & Ivy interior and kitchen, and my designated seating..the plating station! |
I didn’t know it was possible to love a restaurant until I stepped into J&I one unforgettable April evening. I had been a fan of Blais since my mother/daughter date night ritual of watching Top Chef and Top Chef: All Stars. Blais was always our favorite, but never did I think that one day, he might just know who I am.
First time meeting Chef Richard Blais at the San Diego Burger Bash 2013 |
Richard Blais doesn’t cook because of the profit or because his name makes people’s hearts swoon. He cooks because he wants to and because he has a passion for food. He sees dining for what it can be and aims to do that which others have been too afraid to do.
The "carne cruda asada toast" |
This past winter, I checked off an item from my foodie bucket list when I dined at a few two and three Michelin Star restaurants. Daniel Boulud and Jean Georges’ establishments wowed me. They enticed my palate and my mind with their attention to detail, and their perfectly orchestrated lunch and dinner service. The food was as beautiful as it was delicious. I also spent an evening at Colicchio & Sons, wanting to have a taste of Tom Colicchio’s acclaimed Craft restaurant collection. The service was on point, the dishes flavorful and satisfying, and the atmosphere made you forget the winter storm brewing on the other side of the glass window.
These restaurants were some of the best I will ever visit.
But…they weren’t J&I.
As I stared at the beautiful entrées on the gold plated dish wear, I longed to be at Juniper & Ivy. I longed for the surprising twists, the complicated yet complementary flavors, the sarcastic remarks of Chef Jon Sloan, the organized chaos of the plating station, and the comfort of the yodel (see pictures below and you’ll understand). The greatness of J&I also stems from the staff that embody the very essence of Juniper and Ivy, and the Richard Blais’ culinary vision has.
As told to me by the staff, Chef Blais, alongside business partner and J&I investor Michael Rosen, didn’t open Juniper & Ivy to give the general public the mild and lackluster dishes that they are used to; he opened it to cook the food he dreams of, with the confidence that there are those that will appreciate the oddness that makes each starter, entrée, and dessert beautiful, balanced and unforgettable.