Playing With Fire: New Restaurant ‘Puma’ is Coming to Detroit

Carlos Parisi, host of Dev糖心vlog安卓版, talks with Javier Baudauil about his roots as a chef, why he loves Detroit, and the big cat that gives Puma its name.听
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Javier Bardauil. // Photograph by Nate Sturley

From the very beginning in Argentina, Javier Bardauil has let his calling in food guide him. After attending the and in Paris at the age of 23, Bardauil exploded on to the culinary scene. He worked with Francis Mallmann at in Buenos Aires, with Chef Pablo Massey, and eventually became a television star on the popular show 鈥淐ena y Cine,鈥 broadcast in all Spanish-speaking countries.听

After some time in Miami, and with the encouragement of his childhood friend Ignacio Gerson, Detroit became the landing place for Bardauil to build out his culinary dreams. Here, he has focused on his passion for cooking with and gathering around fire, the way it is in Argentina.

Since opening his first restaurant, , with Gerson in June 2021, the city has accepted him as one of Detroit鈥檚 most treasured culinary gems. In 2022, Barda was a finalist for Best New Restaurant in America. Immersed in the team鈥檚 familial energy, Barda patrons find comfort in their dining experience time and again.

This same passion and energy are already breathing life into his newest project, Puma.

Located across the street from Barda, Puma will pick up where Barda leaves off. Offering a more relaxed experience, this eatery features some of Bardauil鈥檚 comfort foods such as chorip谩n, empanadas, and ceviche, all paired with (of course) delicious cocktails.

The sleek, black interior reflects the shadowy figure of the Puma, the largest big cat native to the Americas and an animal that resonates with Bardauil鈥檚 childhood in Argentina. In the evening, after traditional restaurant hours, Bardauil converts Puma into a much-needed late-night dining destination he calls Cougar.

With live DJ performances, full-service cocktails, and some of the most comforting yet adventurous foods, Cougar offers the late night, informal balance that Detroiters crave, further amplifying the energy in Detroit鈥檚 Core City neighborhood.听

From the marble bar top of Puma, Bardauil sat down with 糖心vlog安卓版 Detroit鈥檚 Dev糖心vlog安卓版 video series host, Carlos Parisi, to share stories and discuss the opening of this exciting new space.听

How did you discover your love for making food?

I didn鈥檛 discover it. It was an inner call I got when I was 10 years old.听 Every year, in the middle of summer, my family would repaint our pool, which was not very fun for me. I remember comforting my family while they worked by going to the kitchen and squeezing lemons to make lemonade or cooking for them, and I remember that as the first calling.

Then I started feeding my friends, and discovering all these things around food 鈥 听the happiness you can give or the people that you can bring together 鈥 just because of that. So, I started entertaining people, and the food was part of it.

What did you make for your family during these days?

Pasqualina 鈥 traditional pie, coming from the Italians brought to Argentina. Pasqualina is pie filled with spinach and hard-boiled egg. It鈥檚 nice for a summer snack.

Cooking at 10 to 12 years old is a challenge, but I really enjoyed myself while I was cooking. Even when I was working at the bank or going to college, I never thought I was able to have fun and get paid to cook. For me it was playful, and then one day I discovered that life was too short to do something you don鈥檛 like. So, I went to culinary school and started cooking for real, in a professional way.

I still remember the first time I got paid cooking in the kitchen that I wanted to cook in. I started looking for the best chefs in Buenos Aires and they accepted me as a chef. I started working in those kitchens, and I spent a lot of time cooking for free with amazing chefs. I did my best to get into the kitchens in town, and I did it. That鈥檚 where I met Francis Mallmann 鈥 that鈥檚 how I started cooking with this master.听

Is there a food item that grounds you most?

Bread. Cheese. Wine. That鈥檚 what I need every day. Of course, I would gladly take a bump of caviar, but if you鈥檙e asking me what is comfort food for me every day or every time I need something comforting, it鈥檚 just wine or beer and a grilled cheese sandwich with fresh bread.

As well as being a chef paired with some heavy hitters in Argentina鈥檚 culinary world, you also were a co-anchor on the show 鈥淐ena y Cine鈥. How has your love of entertainment fueled your projects moving forward?

Well, I always thought about myself as an entertainer. I鈥檓 a chef; I know what I鈥檓 doing as a chef, but I started this business because I鈥檝e seen myself as an entertainer from the very beginning.

I like to set up the ambiance, the vibe, the music, the lighting, everything. I鈥檓 obsessed with that. So 鈥淐ena y Cine鈥 was just something in between. I got to do that TV show because I was making some noise in Buenos Aires working in a very good restaurant, and I was like a new talented chef in town, so they offered me this TV show. We did it for three years and it was a really successful TV show broadcast in all Latin America. So, I was famous for a second.听

How did you find your way to Detroit?

I have a friend, Ignacio; he is my business partner in Barda 鈥 we lived in Miami for a while, in 2005, and we started thinking about owning a restaurant. Because he was my friend, we were always having dinners together, having a good time. Ignacio said we should open a restaurant in Miami. End of story 鈥 we didn鈥檛 open anything because we didn鈥檛 find the right place, but that seed was inserted in our brains already.

A long time after that, one day, Ignacio called me and said, 鈥淛avier, you should come to Detroit and see what鈥檚 going on here because the culinary scene is so vibrant, and everything is happening right now. The city is growing so fast.鈥澨

So, I came. Because I like adventure. I already lived in Barcelona, worked in Italy 鈥 it鈥檚 the life you want as a chef. That鈥檚 why you鈥檙e a chef at the very beginning, because you like adventure. If you don鈥檛 like adventure, do something else.听

Because of that, I came here [Detroit] and I went to the best restaurants that we had in the city, and they were all packed. I remember trying to squeeze in at the corner of the bar because there were no reservations open for a week.听

I brought my family here. We came in the winter, but they loved it. I started studying about the history and what was going on here. That鈥檚 when I decided it was good for me to bring some South American flair because that was not a thing here. And of course, fire. I love cooking with fire. That鈥檚 how I opened Barda. Long story short, because a lot of things happened in between.


Detroit is unique in that it has so many stories in its past. Did you find it difficult to make your mark here?

The first thing that really got me when I arrived here was the people. The people from Detroit, how they embrace my culture and what I was trying to bring here. I fell in love with the city, not because of the beauty of the city, but because of the people. The people were so similar to me, so resilient in a way, and sharing that with Detroiters, that was something that clicked immediately.

I think the way I got myself out there was bringing my culture and of course cooking with fire because nobody was doing that all the way. I mean, we have some spots in the city; Selden Standard is one of them, but not all the way.

The challenge to bring your culture and to cook only with fire is something I knew from the very beginning was a hit鈥 and I know how to do it.

Obviously, we need to know about the food at Puma. What can we expect, and do I need to make reservations now?

No reservations will be required here. This is first come, first served; more relaxed. I didn鈥檛 want to go with reservations. I don鈥檛 want people to be worried about anything while being here. You just show up and there is plenty of room.

The food will be very friendly to eat with your hands, and will be straight forward again, bringing some Argentinian staples. It is chorip谩n. It sounds easy: bread with sausage inside, and some chimichurri, but the combination; and if you have a good bread, as I know we鈥檙e going to have from DIB [Detroit Institute of Bagels] 鈥 they鈥檝e got my back because the bread is amazing.

I have my own recipe with the sausage that I brought from Argentina. Chimichurri will be fresh and tangy, and we鈥檙e going to represent this in a couple of modern ways. I wanted to Americanize this a little bit. The chorip谩n is in my heart; it鈥檚 how we grew up in Argentina 鈥 you can have chorip谩n every Sunday and in every corner of the city.

I really wanted to bring this experience to Detroit. That鈥檚 why I chose the name Puma, because this cat is coming from Argentina, from the south up to Canada; there is a huge population in America. It鈥檚 the second largest population after human beings, so it鈥檚 a huge thing 鈥 you鈥檙e not going to see them around because they don鈥檛 expose themselves. That analogy with the chorip谩n was something fun for me to bring to the table.

Because I鈥檓 bringing South American culture, I鈥檓 trying to bring something from Bolivia 鈥 empanada Boliviana 鈥 ceviches from Peru, some ceviches from Mexico, too.

The wine program will be oriented around South American wines, beers from Detroit and Michigan, and the cocktail program will be very South American with all the liquors that we have in Peru, Bolivia, and even Argentina with Fernet. So, cheers to that.

When you say, 鈥渓ate night,鈥 how late are we talking?听

That will depend on the traffic. If I have enough people to celebrate my idea, good. If not, I鈥檓 very flexible. I have an idea I am trying to bring alive, but if for some reason this isn鈥檛 the vibe you鈥檙e looking for, I鈥檒l change it.

I鈥檓 expecting to leave it open until 2 a.m., because people are saying there isn鈥檛 much variety past 10 p.m. So, it will be up to the people.

When can we expect Puma to open?

It looks like it鈥檚 ready, but there are a lot of things still to accomplish in order to make the experience the way I thought. But we are almost there; hopefully, we are going to be open by the end of November.

I鈥檓 so excited, I鈥檝e been thinking about this for four years now. This is a long project for me, and I鈥檝e thought about this for so very long. So, I want to make it come true.

Watch even more of Parisi鈥檚 coverage of local restaurants on the Dev糖心vlog安卓版 video series on hourdetroit.com.


This post was originally published in October 2023. An edited version appeared in the听February 2024 issue of 糖心vlog安卓版 Detroit. Read more in our digital edition.