logo
French department store Printemps brings surprisingly thrilling food to Wall Street

French department store Printemps brings surprisingly thrilling food to Wall Street

New York Post22-05-2025
The loudest cheers on Wall Street aren't for the New York Stock Exchange's closing bell, but for the opening of the five most dynamic restaurants FiDi has ever seen under a single roof.
They're at Printemps, the new Paris-based fashion store that's the glam showpiece of One Wall Street — the landmarked former Irving Trust office building recently converted to luxury condos.
The neighborhood, once starved for quality cuisine, is now a lively residential district as well as a business hub.
7 Printemps opened in the Financial District in March, bringing French fashions —and five restaurants — to the neighborhood.
Brian Zak/NY Post
It's enjoying a dining renaissance with the revived Delmonico's on Beaver Street, SAGA and Crown Shy at 70 Pine Street and lively indoor-outdoor cafes on Stone Street.
But it never had anything like Printemps' nexus of high style and kitchen magic, which are surprising and delighting food-lovers, scene-makers and night owls.
Last Friday at 10 p.m. — two hours after the Printemps store closed — its flagship restaurant, Maison Passerelle, buzzed like a Wall Street Balthazar with couples dressed to kill.
7 The crisp-skinned ocean trout at Maison Passerelle is almost too pretty to eat.
Tamara Beckwith
The next afternoon, Salon Vert — a sexy, green-accented, second-floor raw bar/cafe — was so full, I had to wait for a seat at the bar.
Was this really happening at Broadway and Wall Street, a corner where the favorite dish historically was a street-cart hot dog?
Olivia Gracey, 31, a West Village publicist who's not involved with Printemps, was as surprised as me by Printemps culinary pleasures.
7 Gregory Gourdet, a finalist on seasons 12 and 17 of Bravo's 'Top Chef,' is overseeing all five restaurants at Printemps.
Tamara Beckwith
'We stumbled into Salon Vert as a reprieve from prowling the sunglasses and bags. I'm now obsessed,' she told me. 'I'd drink the sweet potato soup with a straw if they'd let me.'
Wealth advisor/consultant Marina Warner, 41, favors Cafe Jalu, a casual cafe next to Maison Passerelle.
'The people-watching is wild and hilarious. I didn't know so many fancy people were in FiDi with HUGE dogs,' she said, adding, 'The pain au chocolat is pretty insane when I need to eat my feelings in a good way.'
7 The beautiful Maison Passerelle has a vaguely tropical vibe.
Tamara Beckwith
All five eateries are run by Haitian-born chef Gregory Gourdet of Kent Hospitality Group — named for its beloved founder, the late chef James Kent.
Rather than offer a predictable department-store lineup of familiar standards, Gourdet, a finalist on Bravo's 'Top Chef,' bravely intertwines French cuisine with flavors of the French diaspora — the former colonies from Canada to the West Indies to Vietnam. There's no political statement behind it; the dishes are just meant to taste wonderful, which almost all did.
Maison Passerelle's 85 seats are the place to catch Gourdet's best work. The airy space designed by Laura Gonzalez (who did all the restaurants) has a vaguely tropical mood, with a marble mosaic floor, walnut walls, red jasper-topped tables, and plush, green-and-white fabric banquettes.
7 The standout dish is duck breast and confit glazed in cane syrup and bathed in tamarind jus.
Tamara Beckwith
Except for a misbegotten amuse bouche of mushroom broth with nuclear-hot Thai chilis that made three of us gag, just about everything was delicious. A starter of warm, richly herbed plantain bread and butter ($14) was sinfully filling.
The best dish was heritage duck breast and confit glazed in cane syrup and bathed in tamarind jus — a powerful, West African-inspired interplay of game-y, sweet and sweet-and-sour flavors. I almost didn't mind the $72 price, as it could be enough to serve two.
Spaghetti with Maine lobster ($60) arrived perfectly al dente. The tomato sauce was rich and plentiful, but the lobster was too chewy. I'd have gladly had half as much of the general shellfish portion if it were twice as tender.
7 Salon Vert, a raw bar and cafe, has been quite popular.
Tamara Beckwith
At Salon Verte, I enjoyed herbed, round focaccia with a crackling crust ($14) and shrimp Creole ($32) sparked with habanero, black pepper and horseradish.
Then there's the Red Room Bar, an appendage of the landmarked Red Room on the building's Wall Street side. The magnificent space was once open only to BNY Mellon executives until the bank moved out in 2015. It now serves as the store's shoe department with Italian-made Manolo Blahniks going for $1,375.
Sam Freeman, 33, an executive of Global Hotel Partnerships at American Express Travel & Lifestyle, likes the Red Bar's 'vibrant energy and unique ambiance, perfect for a meet-up or a drink after work and dinner.'
7 The light, fresh fare includes peekytoe crab remoulade.
Tamara Beckwith
He favors the Kafe Negroni ($21) spiked with Haitian coffee. For me, a crispy-crackling chicken sandwich ($24) on a potato bun heaped with pickled cabbage slaw and remoulade was all I needed to watch fashionistas smoothly descend a circular staircase to the ground floor with their pooches, huge and tiny, close at hand.
The stock market's wobbly, but I'm bullish on Wall Street's new eats.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

S.F.'s Philz Coffee to be purchased by private equity firm for $145 million
S.F.'s Philz Coffee to be purchased by private equity firm for $145 million

San Francisco Chronicle​

time30 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

S.F.'s Philz Coffee to be purchased by private equity firm for $145 million

Los Angeles-based private equity firm Freeman Spogli & Co. has made a bid to acquire popular San Francisco-grown coffee chain Philz coffee. The firm has previously invested in food franchises Popeyes and El Pollo Loco, as well as Petco. The value of the pending transaction is $145 million, according to reports to stakeholders obtained by Mission Local, which first reported the deal on Friday. Jacob Jabor, son of Philz founder Phil Jaber, did not respond to an inquiry from the Chronicle. Freeman Spogli could not immediately be reached for comment Friday. The deal is reportedly expected to close on Aug. 8, and stockholders have until Aug. 5 to receive an appraisal of their shares. Other stakeholders in the deal are investment firms Summit Partners and TPG Growth, according to Mission Local. Meanwhile, the company's common stock holders, including employees, are expected to see their stock canceled under the terms of the agreement, the outlet reported. Phil Jabar went from owning a corner store to a venture capital-backed business raising some $75 million in funding, after launching Philz out a storefront at 24th and Folsom streets storefront in the city's Mission District more than two decades ago. That location popularized the company's distinct one-cup-at-a-time pour-over style, which is executed by baristas working at separate stations.

Construction begins on first residential lots at controversial Crown development in Sugar Grove
Construction begins on first residential lots at controversial Crown development in Sugar Grove

Chicago Tribune

timean hour ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Construction begins on first residential lots at controversial Crown development in Sugar Grove

Construction has officially started at The Grove, a mixed-use development planned on 760 acres at Interstate 88 and Route 47 that was annexed into the village of Sugar Grove last year. Work is beginning on just one portion of the development area, set to be the community's first residential neighborhood, according to a news release Thursday from Sugar Grove LLC, an entity of Naperville-based Crown Community Development. That area, located along Merrill Road, will offer single-family homes on 214 lots, which Crown expects to deliver to home builders in 2026. Oswego-based J&S Construction was awarded the site contract for the project, according to Thursday's news release. The Grove has been a long time coming, said Crown's Managing Director Jennifer Cowan on Friday. She said that Crown has owned the property for many years, and that 'a lot of work has gone into positioning the property for development.' Last September, the Sugar Grove Village Board approved the development project and agreed to annex the property into the village and give its developer financial incentives via a tax increment financing district, according to past reporting. The project will sit on what is currently mostly farmland surrounding the Interstate 88 and Route 47 interchange. It's set to include neighborhoods, mixed-use commercial and residential areas, a walkable town center and a business park area. The project faced public opposition, however, both before and after the village gave it the green light. In April, a non-binding referendum question was passed by voters asking the village to reverse its decision on the project. In the same election, former village president Jennifer Konen and an incumbent village trustee — both of whom voted in favor of the Crown project — were voted out. Still underway is a lawsuit against Sugar Grove by Kaneland School District 302, which is challenging the tax increment financing district planned for the development project. A TIF district is a form of economic development incentive, in which the value of a property is essentially frozen, with the extra or 'increment' taxes created by developing the property then going into a special fund used to pay for costs related to improving the area. Kaneland was previously in negotiations with Sugar Grove to create an intergovernmental agreement about the TIF district, according to past reporting. But, not satisfied with those terms, the district floated the possibility of taking legal action against the village in February. The Kaneland lawsuit was filed on June 13 with the Kane County Circuit Court, according to case information on the county circuit clerk's website. The district is arguing that the TIF district will mean the school district will lose out on incremental property taxes levied against the area for a period of 23 years, and that there is controversy over whether the area should qualify for tax increment financing in the first place, according to past reporting. Per the lawsuit, the school district is asking the village to dissolve the TIF district. Sugar Grove Village President Sue Stillwell declined to comment on Friday about the lawsuit. Kaneland Superintendent Kurt Rohlwing said on Friday that the district right now is waiting on an initial hearing, which will likely not be until September. 'We want to make sure that we have a fair deal for the financial arrangements that impact all of our communities,' Rohlwing told The Beacon-News. But, despite the opposition and legal action surrounding the TIF district for the development, the Crown project has continued to move forward in recent months. In late April, the village OK'd a final plat of subdivision, essentially a map dividing up a piece of land into smaller lots, for one portion of the development — the part that just began construction, Cowan said. The latest approval Crown secured was a mass grading permit, which is required by its annexation agreement with Sugar Grove, according to Stillwell. Mass grading is essentially preparing the land at a site for construction. The developer is going to be grading nearly 80 acres of the project area, Cowan said, which could take six to eight weeks. From there, the developer will install sanitary sewers, water mains and storm sewers underground, and pave and finish streets by the end of this year or the spring of 2026. Getting the mass grading permit allows Crown to start construction while its engineering plans are still being reviewed, Cowan explained. She noted that significant rain during the fall could impede the process, so the goal is to have the grading done before then. Crown will have to go through the engineering review process and plat approval process for each portion of the project it brings forward to the village, Cowan said. This first development area is expected to offer single-family homes with two- or three-car garages, according to Thursday's news release. Crown is a land developer, meaning it won't be building the homes that will sit on this development area. But Cowan said she anticipates there could be homes built in this area before the end of 2026. The Crown project as a whole is set to have as many as 1,500 residences, according to The Grove's website, and at least 200 acres of open space, including parks and trails. As for the other components, Cowan said that the industrial portion of the land is already under contract for a data center, which could be built in the next three to four years. For Crown's part, she estimated that its build-out of all the parcels in the project's development area could be finished in about 10 years, not necessarily including the construction of the homes or other buildings that will then be built on top of them. But, for now, Cowan expressed optimism about the project as a whole and the progress being made on this first residential piece of the project. 'I'm really excited to be able to deliver some additional housing supply to this market,' Cowan said. 'It is a supply-constrained market. … Housing supply is definitely a need here in Chicago, in the Chicago metro area.'

Lina Kahn is taking a victory lap over the Figma IPO
Lina Kahn is taking a victory lap over the Figma IPO

Business Insider

time2 hours ago

  • Business Insider

Lina Kahn is taking a victory lap over the Figma IPO

Former FTC chair Lina Khan celebrated Figma's blockbuster IPO in an X post on Friday. Khan nodded to Adobe's planned Figma acquisition that fell apart in 2023 under regulatory pressure. Khan drew criticism in Silicon Valley for her antitrust enforcement in Big Tech. The former FTC chair celebrated Figma's stellar IPO in an X post on Friday, nodding at the larger movement, including her own efforts, to block major tech mergers. "A great reminder that letting startups grow into independently successful businesses, rather than be bought up by existing giants, can generate enormous value," Khan, who led the FTC from 2021 to 2025, said. "A win for employees, investors, innovation, and the public." Figma went public on Thursday, valued at $19.3 billion, and closed at 250% above its asking price, valuing the design company at nearly $68 billion and delivering a windfall to investors. The IPO came less than two years after rival Adobe dropped its planned acquisition of Figma. The Adobe-Figma merger, valued at $20 billion, was called off in December 2023 after facing regulatory pressure from European and US officials. It was part of a larger crackdown on antitrust enforcement that was pushed by Khan, who drew the ire of Silicon Valley thanks to her aggressive stance on antitrust issues, especially in Big Tech. "Figma is a massive success, but it's because of the company's innovative growth and not due to the FTC and Kahn," Dan Ives, a tech analyst at Wedbush Securities, said on Friday. Louis Lehot, a Silicon Valley-based partner at Foley & Lardner who advises on M&A and venture capital financing, said that while the blockbuster IPO was a great outcome for the company and investors, "there's a hint of schadenfreude in celebrating independent success while dismissing the potential upside of the Adobe-Figma merger." "The Adobe-Figma merger was a missed opportunity to pair complementary strengths and unlock broader value. Independent scaling and strategic acquisition aren't mutually exclusive—each can serve innovation and the public, depending on the context," he added.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store