You’ve shared that you prefer to work with spaces that are chef owned and operated. Why is that?
There’s no design by panel, and a chef is also a creative. There’s so much to tap into that it can inform other decisions. At Che Fico, for example, everything was made in-house with his hands, with love. Durable and heartfelt, the interiors recall a home-cooked meal. For example, we hand-drew the wallpaper and then had it made.
Can you walk us through what it felt like for you to dine at Che Fico and Protégé for the first time?
The food, decor, and crowd all come together when the doors open to the public for the first time. At Che Fico, color and pattern announce that it will be a lively, fun dinner before you even make your way up the stairs to the dining room. When I ate there for the first time, friends and I had a boisterous dinner and hearty laughs, curled up on a big red leather banquet.
Protégé is of course a different restaurant—it’s inviting and calm without being stuffy. When I ate there for the first time, the restaurant was buzzing, but in an intimate way. I sat at the bar with a glass of white burgundy, chatting with the bartender in between courses, and watched people stop to gaze at Windy’s rope room dividers as they arrived.
There’s also a sweet little quiet time before people come in, when you push all the chairs into place—before it becomes that convivial Degas painting.