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Curry House Japanese Curry and Spaghetti has shuttered, closing all 9 units in Southern California
Employees learned of closure when arriving for work Monday
Articles on companies that have grown by building an impressive portfolio of restaurant concepts.
Originally from Lyon, France, chef Daniel Boulud arrived in New York in 1982 and began building an empire around soulful, seasonal French cooking.
This year, Restaurant Hospitality collected the 25 most powerful multiconcept operators across the country, or what we call the RH 25. With this list, there is no ranking. All 25 are powerful, and all 25 are companies to watch. See all concepts >>
HQ: New York
Leadership: Daniel Boulud, chef and owner; Brett Traussi, chief operating officer
Concepts: Daniel; The Bar at Daniel; Bar Boulud (3 units); Boulud Sud; Café Boulud (3 units); Bar Pleiades; d|bar; db Bistro Moderne (2 units); DBGB Kitchen & Bar (2 units); Épicerie Boulud (3 units); Maison Boulud; DB Bistro & Oyster Bar
Group systemwide sales: Not disclosed
What’s new: DBGB Kitchen & Bar in New York closed in August after eight years. But the group is working on an unnamed new concept in One Vanderbilt in New York, a project that will also include a new location of Épicerie Boulud.
Originally from Lyon, France, chef Daniel Boulud arrived in New York in 1982 and began building an empire around soulful, seasonal French cooking.
In New York, he first worked in the kitchen at the Polo Lounge with another young chef, Thomas Keller. In 1986, he was named executive chef of Le Cirque, where he later won his first James Beard Award for Outstanding Chef.
Boulud won the award again at Daniel, his first restaurant, opened in 1993. Daniel became the foundation on which he built The Dinex Group, now a family of concepts across the U.S., London, Toronto, Montreal and Singapore.
DBGB in New York
This year, Dinex Group closed the restaurant DBGB Kitchen & Bar after eight years in downtown New York, in part because Boulud has a new project in the works.
Dinex Group has signed on to develop a new concept in the One Vanderbilt Avenue project next to Grand Central Station in New York, which will include a 1,400-foot skyscraper.
The restaurant will reportedly be on the second floor, and isn’t expected to open until 2020. The project will also include a fourth location of Épicerie Boulud.
With Hudson Yards across town and the World Trade Center Oculus also attracting big-name restaurateurs, the fine-dining battle in New York is about to get more interesting.
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