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Daniel Patterson feature
Photograph: Clara Rice

Meet the next generation of great Bay Area chefs

One of San Francisco’s most celebrated chefs has retreated from the spotlight to nurture young, underrepresented talent.

Written by
Virginia Miller
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Daniel Patterson is MIA. He won’t be found in the kitchen of his Michelin-starred restaurant, Coi, or in any of his other five eateries that have helped to put California cuisine on the map in the past decade. In fact, he won’t be found running a restaurant anywhere. So, where the hell is the man whom L.A. taco king Roy Choi recently dubbed (in a conversation with Time Out) “a poetic genius”? The 49-year-old has hung up his apron in order to accept a new role: He wants to mentor the next generation of California chefs in the hope of filling the cultural gaps in San Francisco’s dining scene. As Patterson says, “San Francisco is full of great French and Italian restaurants, but what if there were 15 great Palestinian fine-dining restaurants? Or 15 amazing Caribbean-inspired restaurants?”

Patterson, whose nonprofit Cooking Project teaches culinary skills to at-risk L.A. youth, is putting his money where his mouth is by partnering with four young chefs of color. Arab chef Reem Assil serves family-style meze dishes and tasty pastries in Oakland; Mumbai-born chef Heena Patel delves into vegetable-heavy, upscale Indian cuisine at the Dogpatch; Jamaican chef Nigel Jones brings jerk chicken and island cocktails to Mid-Market; and Mexican-American chef Erik Anderson trucks in classic French fare with an emphasis on game birds at Coi.

“I tried Nigel’s cooking, and there was nothing like it in the city,” notes Patterson, recalling the moment of his epiphany. “Then I thought, We can use our knowledge and our team in support of people and concepts that are maybe outside of our expertise. We’ll do something fun, and we’ll support someone to get to a place they maybe wouldn’t otherwise get to.”

For diners, it’s a chance to sample underrepresented cuisines concocted in modern, fresh ways. For the chefs, it introduces their cooking and heritage to a broader audience. And for Patterson, it’s a chance to even the playing field. “When you talk about equity, unless there’s representation at the ownership level, it is really incomplete,” he says. “Restaurants are not going to the solve the massive, deeply entrenched problems [this country has had since its founding], but it doesn’t mean that we can’t do whatever we can do.” That includes developing a whole system to address racial and gender inequality in the kitchen. “You need to minimize the gap between your lowest-paid worker and your highest-paid worker,” says Patterson. “Treat people well and create an environment where they feel respected, where they treat each other with genuine human empathy.”

Will he return to the kitchen at some point? He insists that the swinging door is always open. But, for now, here are  the young, talented chefs you should support (as he does) and their up-and-coming hot spots. 

All photographs by Clara Rice

Meet Patterson’s protégés

Heena Patel, Besharam
Photograph: Clara Rice

Heena Patel, Besharam

Where you’ve heard her name

Patel has been making regional dishes from her home state of Gujarat, in northwestern India, as part of La Cocina, SF’s nonprofit incubator kitchen. “My food reflects my childhood memories,” says Patel. “I miss those bold flavors.”

Her new digs

Located inside the Minnesota Street Project art gallery space, Besharam features 45 seats, an open kitchen and a colorful mural by artist Maria Qamar.

On her inspiration

“In 1992, I was a newly immigrated Gujarati woman as homesick as all the rest. Cooking my childhood recipes not only helped to create a sense of home, but it was also really fun. As much as I wanted to be a chef, I never believed I would actually have a restaurant.”

Order this

The lentils-and-rice Khichdi Bowl, inspired by a dish her mother fixed weekly during her childhood: “It was our mac and cheese, our comfort food.”

1275 Minnesota St (415-580-7662, minnesotastreetproject.com/restaurant)

 

Nigel Jones, Kaya
Photograph: Clara Rice

Nigel Jones, Kaya

Where you’ve heard his name

Nigel Jones’s Kingston 11, named after his hometown’s zip code, has been serving quality, island-inspired dishes in Oakland since 2011.

His new digs

Kaya opened in Alta’s original Mid-Market space with smoldering-hot, modern Jamaican dishes, festive island cocktails and rare Jamaican films projected on the wall.

On building a community

“I wanted to create a space that was welcoming for all. It’s one thing to dream about it and work toward that objective, but it’s another thing entirely to actually see it in reality.”

Order this

Spicy-sweet black-pepper crab, fried plantains in a black-bean sauce and Jamaican black-rum cake

1420 Market St (415-590-2585, kayasf.com)

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Reem Assil, Dyafa
Photograph: Clara Rice

Reem Assil, Dyafa

Where you’ve heard her name

A James Beard Award semifinalist, Assil has garnered national acclaim for Reem’s California, her casual, counter-service Arab café in Fruitvale.

Her cuisine

The classic meze dishes and family-style platters of meats and seafood are inspired by her upbringing in a Palestinian-Syrian home.

On opening her first restaurant

“When I quit my stable job to pursue a career in baking, my parents were worried. They were the typical immigrant family type: They wanted me to be a lawyer or a diplomat. But when they came to the grand opening of Reem’s, my mom was in tears thinking about what it meant to put Palestinians on the map in the culinary world.”

Her new digs

Alta Group transformed the former Haven space on Jack London Square’s waterfront into a sunny restaurant awash in blues and Mediterranean tiles.

Order this

Cold meze, like the labneh and muhammara; the za’atar-spiced chickpea pancake; and the musakhan, or sumac-spiced chicken over markook (an unleavened flatbread)

44 Webster St, Oakland (510-250-9491, dyafaoakland.com)

Erik Anderson, Coi
Photograph: Clara Rice

Erik Anderson, Coi

Where you’ve heard his name

Anderson was cooking up a storm at the nationally acclaimed Grand Cafe in Minneapolis.

His new digs

Anderson creates memorable canapés, like an everything-bagel–spiced avocado-mousse tartlet and a squab plated in multiple parts (think: headcheese served in the bird’s head).

On taking over at Coi

As someone who nerds out over the dining scene, Coi is one of those legendary spots. I never imaged that I would execute food with [Patterson].”

Order this

The tasting menu is constantly changing, but look out for the duck royale served in a cocoa, cassis and pig’s-blood mushroom sauce with foie gras.

373 Broadway (415-393-9000, coirestaurant.com)

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