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    Meet

    Mashama Bailey & Johno Morisano

    TasteMaker

    a celebrated chef redefining Southern cuisine through heritage, storytelling, and fearless creativity.

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    Read The Story

    Mashama Bailey, Semaine Tastemaker. A smiling person with dark skin, wearing red glasses, rests a hand on their cheek.

    “The food that really motivated me to start becoming a chef in the first place was the food that I ate at home growing up.”

    Acclaimed chef Mashama Bailey cleans her pink reading glasses, as her business partner, restaurateur Johno Morisano, slides into a very dapper light blue suit jacket. The two prepare for our interview, which we record in Johno's apartment in the 7th arrondissement of Paris. It is one of the hottest days ever recorded in French history, and I wonder how we will all not faint within the next hour.Thankfully, Americans love their air con. I have never appreciated this fact more than in that moment: 1pm on a Wednesday, pushing 40 degrees. Johno's chic living room is a cool and quiet oasis amid the melting city.

    Close-up profile of a man with a mustache and gray hair wearing round glasses, looking upwards.

    Mashama settles onto the cream-colored sofa and adjusts the clip-on mic on her long dress — no assistance needed. "This is not my first rodeo," she says smiling. It really isn't. Mashama filmed 12 days for Netflix' Chef's Table Season 6 (as the first Black chef), she won not one, but two James Beard Awards — basically the Oscars of gastronomy — and was named one of TIME's 100 Most Influential People of 2026. None other than former Vice President Kamala Harris herself provided the tribute essay for that achievement, writing that "Mashama has broken many barriers in her career." Mashama Bailey's ride is outstanding.


    But every rodeo has a first. When she and restaurateur Johno Morisano met, neither of them had owned a restaurant before. Johno, who had previously worked in the media startup scene, had built up his knowledge of hospitality through years of traveling and eating out with his wife. He knew exactly how he wanted the guest experience to feel. Mashama was in her late 30s, working as a sous-chef in New York City at Prune, under Gabrielle Hamilton, an early mentor. "Gabrielle was the first female chef I ever worked for. She was super respectful. I realized how toxic a lot of my work environments were prior to her and how much I took a lot of that toxicity on. I knew I didn't want to go back into those types of kitchens." So when the opportunity came up, it felt like the right moment to leave her comfort zone, go out on her own, and grow as a chef — to open a restaurant with Johno.

    Restaurant interior with cream walls displaying framed photos, dark brown leather booth seating, and dark wooden tables set with glasses and cutlery.

    The only downside: it was in Savannah, Georgia. Mashama had not planned on returning to the place where she spent parts of childhood, before her family’s move to New York City. Fatefully, however, it was in the South where her core memories of cooking were created and her love for food had been ignited — standing in the kitchen with her grandmother, cooking her iconic cornbread and spaghetti with cheddar cheese. "Really random,” Mashama says, "but very delicious." Country pasta, they would call it. "The food that really motivated me to start becoming a chef in the first place was the food that I ate in the home growing up."


    Coming up as a Chef, Mashama says, there was no platform for an African American woman to see herself in a higher echelon kitchen. So when she set out on the quest to find the taste of the new restaurant, she also found her way back to those earliest culinary impressions that had shaped her — and she found Edna Lewis. The renowned pioneer African American chef who would become Mashama's culinary beacon. Lewis was the chef and partner of bohemian hotspot Café Nicholson in 1950s Manhattan, frequented by the likes of Marlon Brando, Eleanor Roosevelt and Diana Vreeland. In the 1970s she started publishing cookbooks, “reviving the nearly forgotten genre of refined Southern cooking,” as the New York Times described it.


    A pecan pie, a bottle of Ferrand cognac, stacked plates, and a book on a bar counter.

    Today, Mashama is the chairwoman of the Edna Lewis Foundation, which provides culinary programming, scholarships and training to create opportunities for African Americans in the fields of cooking, agriculture, food studies and storytelling. While finding her own voice as a culinary storyteller, Mashama learned to shut out the outside noise and focus purely on who she was and what she liked. It's not always about reinventing the wheel — but just sticking to what you have to say. "Port City Southern" was born. A culinary direction allowing Mashama to blend her New York sensibility with her Southern roots, to create a fresh take on what she lovingly calls "Grandma Cooking" — one-pot cookery, with seasonal ingredients and regional produce of the South, the original farm-to-table lifestyle. Fried okra, grilled chicken skewers, black-eyed pea fritters.


    “Having disagreements, fucking up, all those things are just a natural part of the process.”

    Mashama and Johno opened their Savannah restaurant in a Jim Crow-era Greyhound bus terminal and named it The Grey. In a place where Mashama's family members would not have been able to walk freely, Mashama became an executive chef and trailblazer for Southern cooking. The Grey was named Restaurant of the Year by Eater in 2017 and one of TIME's greatest places.

    Now, the duo looks back on more than a decade of working together, and you can tell that — as with any substantial partnership — they too had to navigate their share of growing pains.


    “It took us a few years to just learn how to do our jobs. And then it took us a few years to learn how to work together and to listen to each other,” Mashama reflects. “Sometimes we're on the same page and sometimes we're not. But ultimately, we want the same thing. We want a successful business. We want to grow a strong team in order for them to be proud of the business that they're running.” Like in any strong partnership, they have a counterbalancing dynamic — yin and yang principle.“You can't really have a successfully growing enterprise if everybody shares the same point of view,” Johno adds. “Having disagreements, fucking up, all those things are just a natural part of the process. We're both exceptionally flawed people at the same time that we try really hard.”

    Mashama and Johno are dog people. The logo of their overarching company Grey Spaces is a greyhound. Two cast iron greyhounds flank the fireplace in Johno's apartment — and after not wanting to get the same dogs as Johno (Rhodesian Ridgebacks), Mashama, allegedly by pure coincidence, became a dog mom of, can you believe it, two greyhounds: three-legged Daisy (a rescue from the racetrack) and Duke.

    The Grey has now been thriving for over a decade. Under Grey Spaces, they opened their second restaurant in Paris in 2025 and have two more forthcoming on the US East Coast in fall 2026. “Southern food on the move,” as they call it. 


    A framed photo of Serge Gainsbourg hangs above a golden dog statue, two silhouette plates, and dried floral arrangements on a shelf, with a leather booth in the foreground.

    “Welcome strangers as friends.”

    Mashama, who completed part of her culinary education in Bordeaux, explains that it was opening L'Arrêt in Paris that made it once again apparent just how much of a melting pot American cuisine truly is. This is why it is so hard to define. So many cultures have shaped it, cooking with the same ingredients but in their own ways: from the Native Americans, the enslaved African Americans, to the French settlers of Louisiana — and now, 250 years after the birth of the United States of America, that same humble little pancake can be a hoecake, a bellini, or a crêpe. But it all came from the same starting point.

    We leave Johno's apartment to make the three-minute walk over to L'Arrêt. It is burning hot outside. The restaurant sits on the corner of a quiet street in the 7th arrondissement. As soon as we enter, it's as if Mashama and Johno suddenly transform into new versions of themselves. Johno takes off the jacket, revealing his tattooed arms. He immediately goes behind the bar, making us coffee, chatting with the staff. Mashama changes out of her black dress into her chef whites, moving fluidly in her natural habitat.

    They tell me that the underlying theme of Grey Spaces is to "welcome strangers as friends." They want to create community and bring people together who may be different but find their common ground at the table. Just like Mashama and Johno experienced in their own relationship.


    A messy table after a meal with leftover food, used cutlery, and stained napkins on a marble surface.

    In their restaurants they intentionally place the tables very close together — which not every guest is a fan of, and will make sure to let them know in a review — to create connection between everyone in the room, from the guests to the servers. “Radical Hospitality”, as they call it. They believe in creating spaces for the locals. L'Arrêt is a “bistro de quartier” — they are there for the neighborhood. It was only natural that they chose the 7th as the location of their new Paris venture, a neighborhood that Johno and his wife have called home for many decades. They even knew Cécile, the previous owner of the space personally.


    When they opened in 2025, the building’s community did not love the blue exterior, so they changed it to a muted green. Now the kitchen tiles are still blue and don’t match the green facade. As the restaurateur, Johno "holds together the fort when it's crumbling around you", he says and excuses himself to hop on a few calls. Meanwhile, Mashama plates her grandmother's original cornbread. She only recently decided to put it on the menu. It took a lot of trial and error to recreate, before Mashama and her mother got it right. “Your grandmother didn’t write down the recipe?”"She didn’t. You’d have to be in the kitchen and watch her.” Mashama says.


    You can feel the warmth when she talks about her grandmother, who passed away in 2011. “What was her name?” I ask. Mashama looks up. "Her name was Geneva." A big smile across her face. She continues plating the cornbread dish.ss “This is how we remember Geneva West.” The lunch rush has subsided at L'Arrêt. On the wall there's a beautiful photo of Johno's dogs, Urchin and Anchovy, playing together — alongside framed photos of James Baldwin and Louis Armstrong. I grab a matchbook from the bowl on the bar. They are the same shade of green as the exterior, and on the front is the greyhound logo of Grey Spaces. When you flip the matchbook open, it reads the famous Gil Scott-Heron lyric: "This revolution will not be televised.” You'd have to be there and watch.


    Listen

    Gallery

    A Black woman in red glasses, a white shirt, and a dark apron stands in a commercial kitchen, hands resting on a stainless steel counter.
    Black overhead bar rack with bottles, hanging wine glasses, and a tucked-in dollar bill, beneath a ceiling reading 'LA CAISSE' in red.
    Pecan pie slices, a book, and liquor bottles on a stainless steel bar counter.
    A professional kitchen with black tiled walls, stainless steel counters, and shelves full of stacked plates and tools.
    A white marble table with remnants of a dessert, including pastries with ice cream, a small dish of jam, and crumpled napkins.
    A wooden service cabinet with an open drawer of organized silverware, a shelf holding napkins and a menu, and a white fan nearby.

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    Learn

    A white bowl of reddish-brown grain stew, garnished with herbs, on a wooden table.

    Mashama's Savannah Red Rice Recipe

    Travel

    Greentruck neighborhood pub with a vintage light blue pickup truck parked outside.

    Mashama: "They make their own ketchup but will let you bring your own brand to use at the table, they also source local Georgia beef for their burgers."

    Green Truck Pub

    Savannah, United States

    2430 Habersham St, Savannah, GA 31401, United States

    Rustic restaurant interior with yellow, peeling walls covered in framed photos and a signed banner, featuring set dining tables.

    Johno: "Go for lunch because you have to wait in line for dinner, and don't let Emilio, who is always sitting at the first table, intimidate you because in spite of looking scary, he is a pussycat."

    Emilio's Ballato

    New York City, United States

    55 E Houston St, New York, NY 10012, United States

    An ornate fountain spraying water in a park at dusk, surrounded by benches, lit lampposts, and trees draped with Spanish moss.

    Mashama: "Great place to sit in the shade and has a farmers market on Saturday mornings."

    Forsyth Park

    Savannah, United States

    Savannah, GA 31401, United States

    A red wine shop named Cave Vino Sapiens with a matching red three-wheeled delivery vehicle parked in front.

    Johno: "A wine shop on the rue Saint Dominique near the Eiffel Tower with a great selection of wines where you can order a bottle and have an afternoon snack of charcuterie and cheese."

    Cave Vino Sapiens

    Paris, France

    145 Rue Saint-Dominique, 75007 Paris

    Storefront of Mei Lai Wah Chinese restaurant, with food photos displayed in the windows and an open door.

    Mashama: "A family run restaurant that closes at 8 pm. All their dumplings are made in house."

    Mei Lai Wah

    New York City, United States

    41 Mott St, New York, NY 10013, United States

    Colorful historic houses with intricate porches and Spanish moss-draped trees lining a street.

    Johno: "The array of architectural styles in Savannah is epic and Jonathan Stalcup, who has a Masters Degree in Architecture from Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD), runs a great architectural tour, but go when the weather is cool for maximum enjoyment."

    Savannah

    Savannah, United States

    Savannah, Georgia, United States

    A sandy beach with a wooden fence in the foreground, calm bay water, and a small dock under a clear blue sky.

    Mashama: "Great place for summer concerts but it gets crowded so go early"

    Jones Beach

    Wantagh, United States

    2400 Ocean Parkway, Wantagh, NY 11793

    Aerial view of a large Ferris wheel on a waterfront with a baseball field, residential buildings, and the Manhattan skyline in the distance.

    Johno: "I grew up in Staten Island and one the best things to do is to ride the Staten Island Ferry Boat for free to get some of the most amazing views of the New York skyline."

    New York

    New York City, United States

    Staten Island

    A bright, modern restaurant and bar with a large indoor tree, dining tables, and a woman seated, with escalators in the background.

    Mashama: "Rose Bakery on the 2nd floor has a great breakfast."

    Bon Marché

    Paris, France

    24 Rue de Sèvres, 75007 Paris

    A bustling outdoor flea market with a man browsing antique silverware, paintings, and jewelry.

    Johno: "If you are in Paris in the spring, check out sortir à paris to find the "vide-greniers," (which translates into "empty the attic,") all around the city as these popup yard sales offer all kinds of good stuff from shops and brocantes."

    Paris

    Paris, France

    Paris

    A colorful botanical garden filled with red, yellow, and purple flowers, with a grand building in the background.

    Mashama: "One of my favorite parks to take a stroll. It’s very pretty and not as crowded as the more centrally located parks in the city center."

    Jardin Des Plantes

    Paris, France

    57 rue Cuvier, 75005 Paris

    Storefront with a black and white striped awning, brick facade, and a black door marked "408A" showing an "OPEN" sign.

    Johno: "A great new addition to Savannah, just off Monterey Square, is Dawn Anderson's store, Coastal Table and Tales, a cookbook mecca. Dawn is the bomb, having traveled the world collecting cookbooks. Don't sleep on her cooking classes and other events."

    Coastal Table and Tales

    Savannah, United States

    408a Bull St, Savannah, GA 31401, United States

    Digest

    Book cover for Maya Angelou's "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings," featuring a black bird silhouette against an orange background with a yellow sun, and text "Foreword by Oprah Winfrey."

    Mashama: "Her writing focuses on finding yourself, connecting to people and embracing the things in life that help you grow, no matter how painful."

    I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings

    Book cover for "Setting the Table: The Transforming Power of Hospitality in Business" by Danny Meyer, featuring a salt shaker on a blue background.

    Johno: "This book is the hospitality bible."

    Setting the Table

    Book cover for "The Taste of Country Cooking" by Edna Lewis, featuring a smiling portrait of the author.

    Mashama: "This cook book taught me that Southern American food is seasonal, healthy and can be elevated."

    The Taste of Country Cooking

    Book cover for "Blood, Bones & Butter: The Inadvertent Education of a Reluctant Chef" by Gabrielle Hamilton, featuring an illustration of a chicken head and a quote by Anthony Bourdain.

    Johno: "If not for this book and the generosity of the author, who introduced Mashama Bailey and me, Mashama and my story, separately and collectively, would be very different."

    Blood, Bones and Butter

    Book cover for "The Street" by Ann Petry, featuring a stylized illustration of a woman in a yellow coat and a small boy on a purple background.

    Mashama: "I was given this book by a family member as a gift with a note inside that said…Write!"

    The Street

    Book cover for Ernest Hemingway's "The Sun Also Rises," with a stylized illustration of a matador and a bull against orange, yellow, and blue shapes.

    Johno: Ernest Hemingway is my writing hero and these books made me want to travel, eat, drink, and live in Paris and, if I could, I would kiss him on the mouth for those gifts.

    The Sun Also Rises

    A book cover for "I Am The Darker Brother" features a painting of a shirtless Black man holding two orange roses against a blue sky.

    Mashama: "This was my Dad’s book and I remember reading it all through junior high school. I loved writing poetry when I was younger."

    I Am the Darker Brother: An Anthology of Modern Poems by African Americans

    Book cover for A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway, featuring a red wine glass silhouette on a light blue background with the title in yellow and white inside.

    Johno: Another book by Ernest Hemingway which made me want to travel, eat, drink, and live in Paris and, if I could, I would kiss him on the mouth for those gifts.

    A Moveable Feast

    Book cover for Anthony Bourdain's "Kitchen Confidential," featuring the author in a chef's coat holding a large knife.

    Johno: "As a born and raised New Yorker, Bourdain kind of made you both afraid to eat out in NYC and and obsessed with it."

    Kitchen Confidential

    Podcast cover for "Good Hang with Amy Poehler" shows a laughing Amy Poehler.

    Mashama: "The host and her guests are giggling the whole show. It's just really fun with great energy."

    Good Hang

    Movie poster for "Bottle Shock" shows cartoon French characters with red wine and flag facing American characters with white wine and flag in a vineyard. Cast includes Alan Rickman and Chris Pine.

    Johno: "Really fun movie if you are interested in wine as this tells the story of the 1976 Judgment, which set the wine world on its ear! Totally worth it."

    Bottle Shock

    Issa Rae smiles, seated on an amplifier in a colorful blazer, surrounded by diverse friends outdoors, with the text "lowkey striving insecure" and "APRIL 12 10PM HBO."

    Mashama: "This show is so LA and as a New Yorker I really appreciate the insight. I love how it shows different parts of the city with really good multiple story lines. Also, great music and fashion "

    Insecure

    Smiling man holding a burger on a spatula and a chicken, next to a flaming grill, with text "HOUSE GUEST".

    Mashama: "I love how relaxed the celebrity interviews are while playing fun games, eating and drinking."

    House Guest

    A blue-tinted movie poster for "Heat" featuring large images of Al Pacino and Robert De Niro, with a smaller image of Val Kilmer holding a gun, and five silhouetted men in suits walking below the title.

    John: "Deniro, Pacino, and Val Kilmer, headline one of the best assembled casts of all time and the film ain't so bad either."

    Heat

    RuPaul in a red and blue outfit, large white curly wig, and blue chain earrings, surrounded by red, white, and blue balloons and confetti, with the RuPaul's Drag Race logo below.

    Mashama: "It’s a great talent based competition show with singing, dancing, acting and fashion. Rupaul is building a triple threat empire. So fun!"

    RuPauls Drag race

    "GONE SOUTH" in distressed white letters over a field of golden-brown tall grass under a muted sky, with "AN AUDACY ORIGINAL" at the top.

    Johno: "To stream from wherever you get your podcasts. True crime in the south is always the creepiest true crime stuff and this podcast nails it."

    Gone South

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