Episode Description
Evan Hennessey is the chef and owner of Stages at One Washington and The Living Room in Dover, New Hampshire, and the founder of Finding Thyme, a culinary travel venture that blends food, place, and community. Since opening Stages in 2012, he has focused on ingredient-driven, regionally rooted dining, collaborating closely with farms and producers across New England. In this episode, he shares why listening to guests and staff matters more than protecting a rigid concept, how mentorship can replace fear-based kitchens, and what it takes to design restaurants that allow owners to step back without losing the soul of the work.
Takeaways
- Restaurants should be designed to evolve
- Listening to guests is a core operational tool
- Small, manageable formats create long-term sustainability
- Community trust is earned through consistency and transparency
- Cooks should amplify farmers and foragers
- Leadership works best when it removes fear from the kitchen
- Mentorship develops stronger leaders than intimidation
- Cross-training builds resilience and shared ownership
- Multiple concepts can coexist when systems are intentional
- Reducing waste starts with whole-animal thinking and menu design
- Financial clarity protects creative freedom
- Stepping back requires teaching others how to lead
- Personal values should shape the businesses you build
- Longevity depends on designing work that supports life outside the restaurant
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