2017 Restaurant of the Year: Bistro 82

With impeccable attention to details and the subtle evolution of ongoing menu items, the staff at Bistro 82 keeps pushing the envelope in a tireless quest to seek perfection
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Photographs by Joe Vaughn

At first glance, Bistro 82鈥檚 menu may look like any other French bistro: steak frites, escargot, foie gras. But a closer look at each and every plate reveals what sets Bistro 82 apart: its tireless commitment to seek perfection.

It鈥檚 easy to stick to what works; it鈥檚 another thing to scrap it and start over. This dedication to the craft permeates from the kitchen throughout the restaurant.

鈥淲hat are we going to do to not be stagnant? What鈥檚 next?鈥 says executive chef Derik Watson of the kitchen鈥檚 approach to food. 鈥淓verything we鈥檙e doing we try to do it better, then the next day we either try to change it or do it better.鈥

Since opening in early 2014, Bistro 82 has certainly not stood still. Dishes such as the cioppino and cobia have been on the menu for a long time, but when you visit the restaurant again, you notice the constant evolution of the dishes.

鈥淚t was a February opening, so warm, rich flavors are comforting, and the direction I was leaning,鈥 says Watson. 鈥淭hat and the identity of the restaurant hadn鈥檛 really been established.听 The concept of course was, that of a modern bistro, hence the classics like steak frites, escargot, steak tartare.

鈥淎s we grew, so did the creative process,鈥 he says. 鈥淎s the seasons progress the flavors tend to lighten up [and] become more refreshing or bright, acidic, et cetera. Garnishes become what is available seasonally.鈥

The scallops, which have been on the menu since Day One, are a perfect example. Watson estimates there have been a dozen versions.

When we first reviewed Bistro 82 in our May 2014 issue, we noted that the scallops were served with a white bean mousseline and sauce Americaine, the rich, creamy, buttery, and slightly spicy shellfish broth-based sauce.

More recently, the scallops were the same 鈥 seared to perfection, not one degree over or under 鈥 but were accompanied with white chocolate, cranberry, chestnut puree, salsify, apple, and radicchio. At first glance, the sweet elements might seem too cloying. The radicchio on its own was bitter. But the sweet, the bitter, and the texture all came together on the plate.

The same held true for many dishes and over multiple visits. The ingredients and flavors of a Bistro 82 dish may change, but the foundation is the same.

It鈥檚 a solid foundation that鈥檚 been built under the direction of Watson.

Today鈥檚 food culture idolizes the celebrity chef, the larger-than-life persona that often dominates a restaurant鈥檚 image 鈥 and the food.

But Watson 鈥 who worked under top chefs such as Takashi Yagihashi at Tribute and Don Yamauchi at MotorCity Casino鈥檚 Iridescence, both previous 糖心vlog安卓版 Detroit Restaurant of the Year winners 鈥 doesn鈥檛 fit that mold. He鈥檚 quick to point out that the restaurant鈥檚 success is not about him.

鈥淚 want [Bistro 82] to be bigger than me,鈥 Watson says.

Bistro 82 isn鈥檛 the flashiest restaurant or the most cutting edge 鈥 and they don鈥檛 want to be. 鈥淭he goal here is to not create what鈥檚 cool or trendy but a great restaurant that鈥檚 timeless,鈥 Watson says, adding that they鈥檙e aiming to 鈥渆stablish a kitchen that would earn the seal of approval 鈥 like Tribute, Bacco, or Golden Mushroom.

鈥淎re we there yet? No, but that鈥檚 the goal.鈥

We happen to think they are well on their way. For its subtle, precise, and elegant food, its impeccable attention to detail, its rock-solid consistency, and culture that celebrates its team, we have selected Bistro 82 as 糖心vlog安卓版 Detroit鈥檚 2017鈥檚 Restaurant of the Year.

Defining 鈥楴ew-School Cool鈥

Although Royal Oak has its share of interesting, diverse restaurants, it admittedly is not the first place that comes to mind when you think about fine dining. But in February 2013, Aaron F. Belen bought the former Sangria/Sky Bar space in downtown Royal Oak.

Belen, barely 30 at the time, decided to go all in, putting up more than $5 million to develop Bistro 82 and Sabrage (its sister nightclub upstairs).

It was, perhaps, a tad ambitious. Most of today鈥檚 new establishments are certainly less formal than traditional fine dining. And somewhat smaller than Bistro 82鈥檚 approximately 150 seats, as well.

鈥淚 hate saying 鈥榟igh-end鈥 or saying 鈥榝ine-dining,鈥 鈥 Belen says. 鈥淭he Lark was classic French fine dining 鈥 it was old-school cool. We wanted to be 鈥榥ew-school cool.鈥 鈥

But that presented a challenge: How to strike a balance between being upscale and special, but not intimidating?

鈥淲e wanted it to have a Michigan feel to it,鈥 Belen adds. 鈥淭his is not Madison Avenue. How do you make it cool 鈥 and still approachable?鈥

Bistro 82 succeeds with a contemporary take that wouldn鈥檛 look out of place in any big city across the country. That鈥檚 by design. Its atmosphere was inspired by a number of visits to Chicago hot spots, from places with Michelin stars to trendy nightclubs that generated buzz.

To launch Bistro 82, Belen formed the AFB Hospitality Group and began surrounding himself with restaurant veterans and rising stars. He tapped Scott Sadoff as his director of operations, who had stints at Ocean Prime in Troy and P.F. Chang鈥檚. General Manager Matthew Hollander (who recently left Michigan for an 鈥渋ncredible opportunity鈥 in Las Vegas) did double duty, keeping an eye on the floor as well as offering his advice as a certified sommelier.

But the master stroke was landing the skilled and accomplished Watson to head up the kitchen.

Belen says Bistro 82鈥檚 real 鈥渟ecret sauce鈥 was having this team develop a philosophy and mission statement, and then doggedly holding to it.

In the Heart of the House

Meticulous attention to detail and precision are hallmarks of Bistro 82鈥檚 culinary style. In the kitchen, blue masking tape is used to label everything and the rule is to cut the tape with a pair of scissors versus hastily tearing it. Something like that has no effect on whether the diner will enjoy their scallops or steak more, but the fact that the staff cuts the tape is symbolic of how the chefs and cooks work.

鈥淭hose details can inform everything we do,鈥 says chef de cuisine Alex Dettwyler, an intensely focused chef who is known to bring a metronome into the kitchen during Saturday night service. 鈥淚f we can鈥檛 get the little details right we can鈥檛 get the big details right. If we can鈥檛 cut the tape, we can鈥檛 sear a piece of fish. 鈥 Those details are what separate good restaurants from great restaurants, and we take a lot of pride in those details.鈥

Watson may have the title of executive chef, but he empowers the rest of the team to have input on the menu while challenging them at the same time.

The concept of team is almost a clich茅, but at Bistro 82, that idea manifests itself in each plate. Take the bone marrow. The unctuous marrow is rich, the crostini crisp to a toast, the frisee salad bright with acidity from the well-balanced dressing. Each component has its place and its individual strength. On their own, they can be too rich, too bland, too bitter.

But together it鈥檚 harmonious and one component can鈥檛 succeed without the other, much like the kitchen itself.

Dettwyler cites an example. 鈥淚 was working the opening shift and was supposed to go home at 6 o鈥檆lock and [was] looking at reservations, looking at weather [and] getting a feeling that something big is going to happen tonight. So I threw my chef coat back on,鈥 he says.

The night just kept getting busier and busier.

鈥淎nd then on cue Derik walks in the back door 鈥 still wearing his hoodie out of the cold [and] starts garnishing, wiping plates, and sending them out,鈥 Dettwyler says. 鈥淭hat was a beautiful moment 鈥斕齟specially [for] some of the cooks who haven鈥檛 spent a lot of time with Derik 鈥 to see him walk into that situation and jump in and help us in any way he could.鈥

A Legacy of Mentorship

Watson鈥檚 style of leading by example stems from his time working with some of the greats. Yagihashi, who built his reputation in Michigan as the executive chef at the legendary Tribute, says as a chef, you can tell pretty quickly if a chef has what it takes. With Watson, who worked with Yagihashi as a line cook at Tribute, he says, 鈥淚 felt right away he could be very good.鈥 Later he would ask him to work for him as his sous-chef at his eponymous restaurant in Chicago, which garnered a Michelin star.

For most of his career, Watson has always looked ahead to what鈥檚 next and not rest on his laurels. While at Tribute, he wanted to push himself as a leader, and took an executive chef job at Peabody鈥檚. Then he moved to Las Vegas before heading to Chicago to help open Takashi.

He came back home to Michigan in search of something more challenging, and worked for Don Yamauchi at Iridescence. But he began to feel stagnant and bored, and took a year off, working odd jobs.

A friend connected him to Belen and Sadoff, and after the three of them clicked, they started planning what would become Bistro 82.

Here the chef has evolved into one who leads by influence and whose style is to 鈥渆arn respect rather than demand it.鈥

Watson fuels motivation and creativity into his associates, says Norman Fenton, who hired in at Bistro 82 as sous-chef and was then promoted to executive sous-chef. At the time of his hiring, he says he was questioning what he was doing and the direction of his career. Then he got the call from Watson.

鈥淗e was very nurturing in the sense of helping you grow and spread your wings,鈥 says Fenton. 鈥淲orking for him is what help shaped the idea of where I want my own career to go.鈥

The experience helped Fenton move on to bigger roles, such as revamping the menu at Tom鈥檚 Oyster Bar and Ale Mary鈥檚 in Royal Oak before heading to Chicago to work for Grant Achatz鈥檚 Alinea Group. He now works at Schwa in Chicago, where he can 鈥渃ontinue honing my skills under amazing chefs just like [Watson].鈥

The development of associates (Watson emphasizes they are not called staff) from dishwashers to the kitchen team has been one of his goals: The next position should be a step up. 鈥淣o one makes a lateral move,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 personally reaching my goals [so] it鈥檚 really exciting to see Matthew [Hollander] head to Vegas [and] Norman moving to a large market and working with the Alinea Group and now with Schwa.鈥

He harkens back to the goal to emulate places like Tribute to earn that 鈥渟eal of approval,鈥 and establish a kitchen that 鈥渋f you see it on someone鈥檚 resume, you would know that you鈥檙e getting a good cook, a passionate cook.鈥

Dettwyler is one who didn鈥檛 make a lateral move 鈥 he actually took a step down in order to work at Bistro 82. He was an executive chef in Ann Arbor, where he and his wife moved to from Pittsburgh so she could go to school. He came to 鈥渟tage鈥 at Bistro 82 (when chefs work for free in a kitchen to see if it鈥檚 a good fit for both parties) and was offered a line cook job because there were no open chef positions. It would have meant a pay cut, a long commute, and more hours, so Dettwyler said thanks, but no thanks.

But a nagging feeling stayed with him. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter how hard it is, it doesn鈥檛 matter how poor you have to be, it doesn鈥檛 matter how much gas you鈥檙e going to spend each week. This is the route to the top,鈥 he says.

Dettwyler called Watson a month later and asked if he could come back. He started at Bistro 82 a couple of days later as line cook, then moved up quickly, first to sous-chef and now chef de cuisine.

Pushing the Envelope

Now that the AFB Hospitality Group has opened The Morrie roadhouse in Royal Oak, Watson is overseeing the kitchen and menu at both places. That means he鈥檚 not at Bistro 82 鈥渁s much as he would like.鈥

Holding true to his goal of nurturing his kitchen team, Watson is leaving much of the menu conceptualization and development in Dettwyler鈥檚 hands.

Still, the two engage in a lot of back and forth in order to create the perfect dish. They communicate via phone and texts, and the conversation could start off simply with an ingredient such as bergamot, until the collaboration becomes a fully formed dish.

鈥淒erik has changed a lot in past year and a half 鈥 from the guy who I was saying 鈥榊es, chef鈥 to,鈥 says Dettwyler. 鈥淣ow 鈥 he鈥檚 more like the Yoda or the Obi-Wan Kenobi to my
Luke Skywalker.鈥

He adds that Watson and operations director Sadoff built the car; he鈥檚 just driving it and continuing down the path that鈥檚 been paved.

And the direction is always forward.

鈥淗ow far can we push the envelope in terms of quality while still being viable as a business?鈥 Dettwyler says. 鈥淪ince I鈥檝e started we鈥檝e always had that established goal of being an institution 鈥 not just being a flash in the pan [or] a trendy restaurant that comes and goes.

鈥淧art of that is looking at the future, taking the long view of things, and not being afraid to make hard decisions,鈥 Dettwyler says, citing the choice to make all the bread for both restaurants in house as an example.

鈥淸It] was a huge undertaking and it was a huge commitment, and now it鈥檚 just a part of what we do, just one more step toward perfection 鈥 something you never get to, but you鈥檙e pushing toward it every day.鈥