Minneapolis owes Portland a drink. Make it a ras el hanout latte.
In the kitchen of a seafood restaurant in that proudly weird Pacific Northwest city, two early-career chefs converged at the right time, leading, a decade later, to the formation of one of the Twin Cities' most exciting food partnerships.
Together, Daniel del Prado and Shawn McKenzie are the team behind two locations of Café Cerés, a Middle Eastern-infused daytime cafe that showcases McKenzie's expert work as a pastry chef — and is home to that date-sweetened and coriander-and-cumin-spiced ras el hanout latte. Their partnership grew this summer with the opening of Cardamom, the Walker Art Center's new Mediterranean restaurant, and they hope to open more outlets of Café Cerés.
Separately, del Prado owns and operates (with other partners) a quintet of highly acclaimed restaurants: Martina, Colita and Rosalia in south Minneapolis, Josefina in Wayzata, and Sanjusan in Minneapolis' North Loop.
But the collaboration between del Prado, the wildly prolific and deeply respected restaurateur, and McKenzie, one the area's most talented pastry chefs, is close to both of their hearts because it began in friendship. "It's kind of a mini love letter to each other," McKenzie says one summer afternoon, seated beside del Prado on a bench in the Walker lobby in front of the still-under-construction Cardamom.
It also might be a model for how the evolving Twin Cities restaurant scene can support the advancement of underrepresented minorities. Del Prado is a Latin American immigrant; McKenzie is a Black woman. Both say it's no coincidence that they've chosen to lift each other up.
"It's in the back of our minds 100 percent of the time," del Prado says.
Hardworking beginnings
But first, there was the Portland fish house in late 2010. Del Prado was the sous chef and McKenzie was the pastry chef. "Usually those two are the ones doing all the work," del Prado says. "The chef gets all the attention."