Sometimes things work out exactly as planned. Other times, not so much.
Jim Christiansen and Lorin Zinter have been kicking around the idea of opening a restaurant together for at least four years, with varying degrees of seriousness. Somewhere along the way, routine banter between chef (Christiansen) and front-of-house pro (Zinter) got real, and on Tuesday the La Belle Vie-groomed duo opened Heyday in Uptown.
It's just not what they initially had in mind.
"Four years ago if you would've told me this is the restaurant you're going to open, I don't think I would've believed you," Zinter said, sitting at his 25-seat, L-shaped bar.
While the industry pals who helped open La Belle Vie in Minneapolis and, later, Sea Change have no regrets (quite the contrary), their original daydream was a much smaller turnkey operation — not the major renovation project they ended up with.
Last year Zinter, Christiansen and their partner/design guy, Mike Prickett, settled on a space — well, then two spaces — at 2700 Lyndale Av. S. that formerly housed the Sunny Side-Up Cafe and a coin laundry. The rooms have been gutted and converted into their 110-seat new American bistro. Prickett went the rustic-chic route, with reclaimed wood from a Wisconsin barn, lots of exposed brick and a sleek marble bar top.
"We've been pleased with how it evolved," Zinter said. "It's just funny how things change."
Despite the La Belle Vie buds' fine-dining pedigrees — Zinter is coming off a stint as the Minneapolis Club's food and beverage director, while Christiansen has worked at Copenhagen's world-renowned Noma and more recently Union — Heyday is a more casual affair. After all, it's hard to get too highbrow with a joint named after a Replacements song. "We don't want people to ever feel like this is a special occasion they have to get dressed up for or anything," stressed Zinter, an unabashed 'Mats fan. "I'm walking around wearing jeans and a T-shirt half the time because … "