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From "Cheftacular, Rising
Stars are Stirring in Denver's finest kitchens"
By Steve Knopper, Rocky Mountain News Dining
Guide 2004, March 12, 2004
Jun Makino drew on a long,
multifaceted restaurant background to open Junz in Parker in 2003.
To the delight of many
diners, the 29-year-old chef combined his Japanese cultural background
and French-chef training to invent a restaurant that serves sushi
and mi soup appetizers before an entree of broiled Chilean sea bass
with risotto and lobster bouillabaisse sauce.
"It was hard
at first, because people didn't understand what French and Japanese
meant, but now people are starting to open their eyes," says
Makino, who was born in Tokyo and moved to the United States at
age 4.
"Most French
food is very heavy, creamy. I try to take that away to make it a
combination of Japanese and French."
Makino's cooking background
begins with his parents' restaurants in California. He made his
first dish for customers (a Cobb salad) at age 18; by age 21, he
was "almost running" a few of the properties.
By working with an uncle
at upscale restaurants such at Napa in Las Vegas, Makino graduated
to dues-paying work, such as grilling hamburgers poolside. He wound
up studying with the late Jean-Louis Palladin, the French chef who
owned the famous restaurant Jean-Louis at the Watergate in Washington,
D.C.
Makino moved to Denver
because his father ran a local restaurant called Todai (now closed)
and the young chef liked the area. But the rent was too high in
Denver and Highlands Ranch, and he saw potential in Parker. In Makino's
case, the real estate mantra of location, location, location has
been mostly a blessing -- but sometimes it's a curse.
"I heard a rumor that
I'm successful in Parker because there's no good restaurants in
Parker," he says. "I think if I opened in Cherry Creek,
I could be a top-notch restaurant, still."
"I had a lot of negative
advice and negative comments (at first). But the people who know
me, they really got me going."
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