Chef Vincent Francoual parts with downtown Minneapolis restaurant group

The French bistro Chloe, named after his daughter, will become an American neighborhood bistro.

The Minnesota Star Tribune
July 22, 2025 at 10:42PM
Chef Vincent Francoual at his new restaurant Chloe by Vincent.
Chef Vincent Francoual poses for a photo in his bistro Chloe by Vincent, named after his daughter, in December 2022. (David Joles/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Vincent Francoual, the acclaimed French chef behind Chloe by Vincent and, before that, Vincent A Restaurant, is parting ways with Restore Restaurant Holdings, the company that owns Chloe and EaTo in downtown Minneapolis.

Francoual said in a social media post that the decision came from wanting to spend more time with his family, including the daughter whose name graces the bistro in the Canopy by Hilton hotel. Francoual has been serving the southwestern French cuisine with which he grew up there since December 2022.

“It hasn’t been an easy decision to make, but I’ve chosen to search for different opportunities that will give me the flexibility to spend more time with my family: Brenda, Chloe, and of course, our dog Toby,” he wrote.

Chloe, at 700 S. 3rd St., Mpls., will lose the “by Vincent” in its name. Though changes won’t be noticeable at first, Chloe will gradually transform into a neighborhood American bistro, said Matt Monroe, who founded Restore Restaurant Holdings with his father, Dennis Monroe. Popular dishes such as French onion soup and beef bourguignon will remain on the menu.

Francoual’s departure gives the company a chance to change the direction of Chloe, from special-occasion fine dining to something more casual for residents in the Mill District part of downtown Minneapolis.

“It’s hard to be a French restaurant in a hotel in Minneapolis,” Monroe said. “We need to reposition to have a broader appeal and also really speak to the neighborhood, like we did at EaTo,” which gets a majority of its business from locals and regulars.

“Chloe has the potential to do that, too, but right now it’s viewed as a little bit more of a celebration restaurant or a destination, instead of, ‘We can walk two blocks and get a good burger,’” Monroe said. “Vincent’s name attached to the restaurant, it complicates things, because there is this white tablecloth, fine dining stigma attached to who he is.”

The group is in the midst of a search for a new executive chef to oversee Chloe and EaTo’s culinary operations. They are also working with Serge Smith, formerly of Terzo, to make changes to the menus at the cafeteria at the Northstar Center in downtown Minneapolis, where they recently took over management of food concepts.

Monroe is hoping the Northstar deal will bring some predictability to the notoriously unpredictable business of operating two other restaurants. “It was really a way of diversifying our business a little bit, adding some gas to the fuel to help expand our restaurants.” One of his goals is to install a patio at Chloe.

Francoual ends his run at Chloe July 26.

“The camaraderie forged in professional kitchens is intense and memorable, so I also want to sincerely thank all the staff at Restore for their skill, support, and commitment to creating a top-quality dining experience for our customers,” he wrote. “I also want to apologize to them about any inconveniences or unplanned changes if any that my decision might bring to their life.”

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about the writer

Sharyn Jackson

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Sharyn Jackson is a features reporter covering the Twin Cities' vibrant food and drink scene.

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