There’s a certain type of confidence that doesn’t show itself. It’s evident in the way a cook navigates a kitchen, in the silent choices made at a stove without consulting anyone, and in the lack of a folder of laminated sheets on the counter. Jess Shadbolt exudes such self-assurance. It is the kind that has been gradually developed over years of absorbing rather than merely learning, and it is what sets her restaurants apart from others in New York.
Suffolk, the type of English county that makes a lasting impression, is where Shadbolt was raised. Her first culinary recollection is filled with warmth and a particular ache: L’Artista, a neighborhood Italian restaurant run by Baptista and his wife Franca, served brown-butter-dressed ricotta ravioli. Every Thursday, the family would gather food from the restaurant and eat prosciutto from their fingers while her mother was in the hospital. She seems to have incorporated the simplicity and generosity of those meals into all of her subsequent cooking.

She didn’t follow the traditional path to professional kitchens. She began her career in public relations before working as an assistant to the renowned Rose Gray and Ruth Rogers at The River Cafe in London in 2009. The majority of people in that role might have continued to work in administration. Shadbolt didn’t. She eventually enrolled at Ballymaloe Cookery School in Ireland after observing and absorbing the place’s philosophy, which emphasizes ingredient first, season always, and intuition over instruction. She went back to work as a chef at The River Cafe. Looking back, the trajectory seems almost inevitable.
The restaurant industry took notice when she and her partners, Clare de Boer and Annie Shi, opened King in New York in 2016 with little more than conviction and a common cooking philosophy. Every day, the menu is altered. The kitchen is devoid of written recipes. When people hear that final detail, they usually stop in their tracks.
Operating a restaurant without recorded recipes is not a sign of carelessness; rather, it is the outcome of extensive training that has become second nature. Though it may sound simplistic, Shadbolt’s description of the kitchen’s foundation is based on beans and greens. She once heard someone say that King was just a bean and a green, seemingly with a hint of bitterness. At first, she felt insulted. She now refers to it as a source of pride.
In 2022, Jupiter opened inside Rockefeller Center, specializing in colorful wines and local Italian pasta. Rather than being distinct identities, both eateries seem to be manifestations of the same sensibility—cooking that is particular about its influences without being dogmatic about them.
Shadbolt’s life in Brooklyn has a distinct rhythm off the pass. Radio 4 playing while she peels vegetables, Sunday lunches at home for American friends learning about the British roast, and Saturday mornings at the Fort Greene farmer’s market. She almost always goes to The Green Grape. She applies bottarga to nearly everything. The reason her cookbook, which is currently being developed, is more difficult than anticipated is that the recipes have only ever existed in her and her team’s hands. It is difficult not to find something admirable about that specific issue.
She recently celebrated turning forty with a long lunch in southern France that included forty friends, a tarte tropézienne, rosé, saffron-stained hands, bouillabaisse over a live fire, and a swim home. It’s the type of meal that feels more like a declaration of values than a birthday. That might be the same thing for Jess Shadbolt.
