“We have a beautiful oyster bar. We’re very focused on the Gulf,” chef Mashama Bailey says about Diner Bar, one of two restaurants that she and business partner John O. Morisano opened in 2022 off the lobby of Thompson Austin. Growing up in New York and Savannah, Bailey might never have pictured herself “focusing on the Gulf” in the capital of Texas, but that versatility is what makes her the chef that she is: Wherever she goes, she scans her environment and tucks its best elements into her pockets.
If you’re not familiar with Bailey, you might be familiar with The Grey in Savannah, the Port City Southern-inspired restaurant that she and Morisano opened in 2014 in a restored 1938 Greyhound bus terminal. Not only did the space turn out to be pure cool—Art Deco architecture, shower stalls once used by bus drivers transformed into private dining rooms, a ticket booth-turned-kitchen—the historical symbolism was poignant: When built, the station, its lunch counter, and the whole South were segregated, and now here was Bailey, a Black chef, replacing that history with something beautiful and inclusive. At The Grey, she went on to pick up two James Beard Awards: ‘Best Chef: Southeast’ in 2019 and ‘Outstanding Chef’ in 2022.
Bailey describes her trajectory like this: “I grew up a Southern girl eating figs off the tree. Then I was in the New York melting pot with my grandmother’s Hawaiian chicken, bagels from Jewish delis, Korean barbecue. My culinary roots are multicultural.” When she was young, she watched her mother and grandmother make traditional Southern dishes. Their respectively pork-based and turkey-based collard greens, for example, inform the vegan version she prepares at The Grey with onion, olive oil, and smoke. She entered a whole new culinary world when she got to college, “where everyone was from a different island.” Friends from Trinidad, the Dominican Republic, and Puerto Rico taught her how to prepare sofritos, plantains, and roasted herby chicken. “We weren’t cooking with our grandparents,” Bailey says, “so we didn’t have stock. We had bouillon cubes. We had ham-flavored Goya and we put it on everything.” Over winter break of her first year of college, when she made chicken curry for her family, her mother said, “You should cook for a living.”