
Here Is the Full List of James Beard Awards 2025 Winners
Tonight, in a star-studded ceremony at the Lyric Opera in Chicago, the James Beard Foundation announced the winners of the 2025 James Beard Awards, considered the highest accolade for chefs and restaurateurs in America. In the major categories, Frasca Food and Wine in Boulder, Colorado was named Outstanding Restaurant, Jungsik Yim of Jungsik in New York City took home the award for Outstanding Chef, and Bûcheron in Minneapolis was named Best New Restaurant. It was a big night in general for NYC, which was shut out of the major categories entirely last year: This year, Atomix won for Outstanding Hospitality, while the team of Lee Hanson and Riad Nasr (of Frenchette, Le Veau d' Or, and Le Rock) won Outstanding Restaurateur.
This evening's Restaurant and Chef Awards follow Saturday's Media Awards hosted by Padma Lakshmi, which celebrated food media working in cookbooks, journalism, and television and audio. For this 35th-annual Restaurant and Chef Awards, Nyesha Arrington and Andrew Zimmern acted as the ceremony hosts.
Tonight's award winners, selected from a finalists list announced on April 2, follow previously announced 2025 Beard Award recipients: journalist and historian Toni Tipton-Martin (who earned the Lifetime Achievement Award), Cafe Momentum founder Chad Houser (who received the Humanitarian of the Year Award), and the five winners of the Impact Award. Several winners addressed the current political moment directly in their speeches — three specifically emphatically declared 'fuck ICE' at the end of their remarks. The full list of winners, below:
Lee Hanson and Riad Nasr, Frenchette, Le Veau d' Or, and Le Rock, New York, NY
Jungsik Yim, Jungsik, New York, NY
Frasca Food and Wine, Boulder, CO
Phila Lorn, Mawn, Philadelphia, PA
Bûcheron, Minneapolis, MN
JinJu Patisserie, Portland, OR
Cat Cox, Country Bird Bakery, Tulsa, OK
Charleston, Baltimore, MD
Identidad Cocktail Bar, San Juan, PR
Arjav Ezekiel, Birdie's, Austin, TX
Ignacio Jimenez, Superbueno, New York, NY
Jon Yao, Kato, Los Angeles, CA
Noah Sandoval, Oriole, Chicago, IL
Carlos Delgado, Causa and Amazonia, Washington, D.C.
Karyn Tomlinson, Myriel, St. Paul, MN
Salvador Alamilla, Amano, Caldwell, ID
Vijay Kumar, Semma, New York, NY
Sky Haneul Kim, Gift Horse, Providence, RI
Timothy Wastell, Antica Terra, Amity, OR
Nando Chang, Itamae AO, Miami, FL
Jake Howell, Peninsula, Nashville, TN
Yotaka Martin, Lom Wong, Phoenix, AZ
Thomas Bille, Belly of the Beast, Spring, TX
The following wins were previously announced:
• Lucky Wishbone, Anchorage, AK
• Dooky Chase, New Orleans, LA
• U.S. Representative Angie Craig (the Ranking Member of the House Committee on Agriculture)
• Anthony Edwards, Jr., (co-founder of Black-owned restaurants guide EatOkra)
• Seanicaa Edwards Herron (founder and executive director of the Freedmen Heirs Foundation)
• Dune Lankard (president and founder of Native Conservancy)
Disclosure: Some Vox Media staff members are part of the voting body for the James Beard Awards. Eater is partnering with the James Beard Foundation to livestream the awards in 2025. All editorial content is produced independently of the James Beard Foundation.
Additional photo illustration credits: Getty Images for the James Beard Foundation
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Eater
4 hours ago
- Eater
A Boulder Italian Restaurant Just Won Its Fourth James Beard Award
The James Beard Foundation (JBF) Awards swept Chicago into a frenzy on Monday, June 16, at the Lyric Opera. Of all the Colorado contestants, upscale Italian restaurant Frasca Food and Wine in Boulder was named Outstanding Restaurant. This makes the restaurant's collective fourth James Beard Award. Though there was a lot of finalists headed into the final night of ceremony, 99 percent of the Colorado contestants lost out. That means Josh Niernberg for his work at Bin 707 Foodbar in Grand Junction did not win the Outstanding Chef award. In the Best New Restaurant, Denver's Alma Fonda Fina did not take home the gold, either. Further, Penelope Wong of Yuan Wonton did not win Best Chef: Mountain (CO, ID, MT, UT, WY), nor McLain Hedges and Mary Allison Wright for their drinks at Denver's Yacht Club. In Parker, Carolyn Nugent and Alen Ramos's creations at Poulette Bakeshop lost in the Outstanding Pastry Chef or Baker category. The awards just keep rolling in for Frasca, though. In 2008 Lachlan Mackinnon-Patterson won the then-applicable Best Chef: Southwest for his work at the restaurant. In 2013 the JBF awarded Frasca in the Outstanding Wine Service category. And in 2019 the Boulder restaurant loved for its inventive, seasonal dishes won the Outstanding Service award. In 2023, that old tire company Michelin came to town and honored the business with a star and an Outstanding Service award. The night was a testament to the cuisine and work immigration brings to the United States. Only a few winners failed to mention the foodways that make their restaurants not just popular but possible. 'If you are new to the country and you don't speak the language, the hospitality industry is here for you,' Frasca Food and Wine's partner and master sommelier Bobby Stukey said on stage. • Frasca Food and Wine, Boulder, CO See More:


Eater
6 hours ago
- Eater
D.C.'s Own Carlos Delgado of Causa Wins a James Beard Award for Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic
Carlos Delgado of Causa and Bar Amazonia has taken home the illustrious James Beard Award for Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic. The James Beard Foundation announced the winners of its 35th-annual Restaurant and Chef Awards during a glitzy Monday night gala at the Lyric Opera of Chicago. Well-dressed hospitality professionals were crowned coveted medals across dozens of categories in what is largely considered the Oscars of the food world. Read the full list of winners here. In nearby Baltimore, fine dining American stalwart Charleston received the James Beard Award for Outstanding Wine and Other Beverages Program in the country. Delgado, who oversees two Peruvian restaurants in D.C. — tasting menu-centric Causa and the pisco-fueled standout Bar Amazonia located upstairs — was one of five finalists for the city, though others did not advance to the final award. With a Peruvian flag in tow, Delgado brought his chef de cuisine Alex Lazo onstage, calling him his 'right-hand man' who 'works with me every day.' Pulling off two restaurants in one space 'is a lot of hard work,' he notes, especially since both debuted at once during the pandemic. 'This whole thing is an immigrant's dream of mine since I was a little kid,' says Delgado, noting it's his grandmother who taught him how to cook. Presenter Marcus Samuelsson, the celebrity chef who just opened his first D.C. restaurant (Marcus DC) in NoMa, handed Delgado the award. Just like when Causa was a best new restaurant finalist at the Chicago ceremony in 2023, Delgado admits he 'didn't write a speech' for last night's win. Delgado faced impressive competition in his category, from nominees such as fellow D.C. chef Henji Cheung of Queen's English, Philly's Jesse Ito of Royal Sushi & Izakaya and Amanda Shulman of Her Place Supper Club, and Dan Richer of Razza in Jersey City, N.J. It wasn't a total loss for Philadelphia, which saw Phila Lorn of stunner Cambodian restaurant Mawn win in the Emerging Chef category. A D.C.-proper chef hasn't won the Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic award since 2019, when Filipino chef Tom Cunanan took the title for (now-closed) Bad Saint. Last evening also marked a huge win for Charleston's vet chef Cindy Wolf, who was a James Beard finalist for Best Chef: Mid-Atlantic in 2006, 2008; and every year from 2014 to 2019. Around since 1997 in Harbor East, this was the first time Charleston won for its wine program. Wine director Lindsay Willey oversees the 1,100-bottle list. Meanwhile, every other D.C. finalist for 2025 ultimately didn't take home a medal. That included Moon Rabbit's Susan Bae, who was up for Outstanding Pastry Chef or Baker for the second year in a row; Fried Rice Collective's Scott Drewno and Danny Lee of Anju, Chiko, and I Egg You (Outstanding Restaurateur); and Mita in Shaw (Best New Restaurant). D.C. chefs took home big nationwide accolades in 2024, with Perry's Masako Morishita winning Emerging Chef of the Year and Albi's Michael Rafidi named Outstanding Chef (a title that went to Oyster Oyster's Rob Rubba in 2023). Soon after opening, Causa was named one of Eater's Best New Restaurants in America and earned its first Michelin star. Lima-born Delgado previously honed his craft under José Andrés as the longtime executive chef at Penn Quarter's China Chilcano. He's busier than ever these days, as the newly named culinary director of the Wharf's sparkling Mediterranean restaurant La Vie. During a post-awards segment – the first of its kind during the VIP after-party at Chicago's Union Station – a medal-donning Delgado was pulled aside to recap his win. He thanked his daughter Sophia and son Matteo for the honor, and says he's already picked out a spot at Causa for the award (which is where he also keeps Eater's tomato can). The Media Awards hosted by Padma Lakshmi took place on Saturday, June 14 — read the full winners list here . Disclosure: Some Vox Media staff members are part of the voting body for the James Beard Awards. Eater is partnering with the James Beard Foundation to livestream the awards in 2025. All editorial content is produced independently of the James Beard Foundation. See More:


Eater
7 hours ago
- Eater
2 Twin Cities Restaurants and Chefs Win James Beard Awards
Tonight, the James Beard Foundation announced the winners of its Restaurant and Chef Awards, with two Twin Cities restaurants taking home awards for Best New Restaurant and Best Chef: Midwest. The Monday, June 16, ceremony at the Lyric Opera of Chicago also included new categories to honor the beverage industry, including Best New Bar, Outstanding Professional in Beverage Service, and Outstanding Professional in Cocktail Service. Find the full list of the 2025 James Beard Award winners here. Karyn Tomlinson, of Myriel in St. Paul, won in the Best Chef: Midwest category. Tomlinson quickly became known for her 'grandma cooking nouveau' style at Myriel after opening in 2021, combining her Scandinavian/Minnesotan heritage and French culinary training. Alluding to that 'grandma chic' cooking, Tomlinson dressed up in the same coral dress her grandmother wore when she was crowned the 'dazzle corn queen' in 1941. She ended her acceptance speech with some Midwest pride, saying 'the Midwest is beautiful, the Midwest is diverse, the Midwest is tenacious and strong.' Bûcheron won the Best New Restaurant category, with co-owner Janas 'Jeanie' Ritter accepting the Kingfield bistro's national award. Bûcheron was one of 10 nominees in the category, and the only restaurant from the Midwest and Great Lakes regions. (The only other Minnesota restaurant ever nominated in the category was Owamni, which brought home the award in 2022.) 'It's the neighborhood restaurant we always wanted in our neighborhood,' Jeanie said during her acceptance speech, adding that some of her guests have come out to Chicago to celebrate with them tonight and thanking them 'for making it possible to do what we love.' She and her husband Adam Ritter spoke to Eater earlier this month about how they built the 'Midwest French' restaurant so they could spend more time with their two toddlers. Ritter also told Eater before the awards that 'Minnesota cuisine is defined by the ingredients rather than the technique,' and Tomlinson seemed to echo that statement during a quick interview with Eater at the gala. She was proud of both Myriel and Bûcheron's wins as both are 'proudly Minnesottan and Midwestern and are exploring that in different ways in our connections with farmers.' She hopes that the Midwest will be recognized more in the future for its diversity and the many cultures that define the cuisine of the heartland. Bar Brava did not take home a Beard tonight in the new Outstanding Wine and Other Beverages Program. (Charleston in Baltimore brought home the win.) Here are the full lists of the Twin Cities's five finalists and 10 semifinalists for the 2025 James Beard Awards. Disclosure: Some Vox Media staff members are part of the voting body for the James Beard Awards. Eater is partnering with the James Beard Foundation to livestream the awards in 2025. All editorial content is produced independently of the James Beard Foundation. See More: