Edouardo Jordan of Seattle’s Salare is a 2016 F&W Best New Chef

Secret-weapon ingredient: Scotch bonnet chiles and other Caribbean peppers. Read more about this amazing Seattle talent, one of the new Food & Wine Best New Chefs.

Edouardo Jordan
Photo: © Jenny Jimenez

Where: Salare, Seattle
2404 NE 65th St.; 206-556-2192; salarerestaurant.com

Why Jordan is amazing: The menu at Salare represents the chef’s outstanding and diverse training, from salumi-making in Italy to working the line at Per Se in New York City and cooking over live fire at Seattle’s Bar Sajor. His superb sweetbreads with collard greens merge his fine-dining experience with his Southern roots.

Born: St. Petersburg, FL, 1980

Education: Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts, Orlando, FL

Résumé: Bar Sajor, Sitka & Spruce, Seattle; Lincoln, Per Se, NYC; The Herbfarm, Woodinville, WA; The French Laundry, Yountville, CA

Edourado Jordan
© Salare

Signature dish: Black Cod Rundown. This refined take on "rundown" (a traditional, homey Jamaican fish stew) honors Northwest ingredients like local cod, yet the coconut milk and plantains evoke Afro-Caribbean and Southern American cuisine. "It’s not very often you see plantains at fine-dining establishments."

First restaurant job: Server at the restaurant chain Bennigan’s

How he got into cooking: "It was a combination of things. My family, we always cooked, we always did things around food: big Sunday dinners, cookouts with the family. I’m from the South—we would do it up Southern style."

Where the name of the restaurant came from: Jordan stayed with ninth-generation salami makers in Italy when he was studying charcuterie there; "salare" means to salt the meat to cure it.

Edourado Jordan
© Salare

Alternative career: Sports agent. "I had two degrees in school: sports management and business administration. I ended up getting an internship with the Tampa Bay Rays, the baseball team in my hometown. But I wasn’t having fun and had food in my heart and soul."

All-time favorite cookbook: The Joy of Cooking because the recipes are "legit, honest and true."

Secret-weapon ingredient: Scotch bonnet chiles and other Caribbean peppers

Three items you’ll always find in his fridge: Coconut water; olives or tapenade; fish sauce

Follow @salareseattle on Instagram.

Was this page helpful?

Related Articles