It’s been eight years since Saffron, the influential Mediterranean restaurant, closed its doors in downtown Minneapolis. But for chef/co-owner Sameh Wadi, Saffron is not only still front of mind, it’s in his inbox every day.
“I still have the same email from when Saffron was around, so I was like, that’s got to be a sign you probably are not ready to give that one up,” Wadi said in a phone call with the Star Tribune.
That old email address will soon come in handy. After a year of self-reflection, including a much-needed break from the restaurant business last summer, Wadi announced he will reopen Saffron. The news was first reported by Mpls.St.Paul magazine.
Wadi was 23 in 2007 when he opened Saffron Restaurant & Lounge with his brother Saed Wadi in a high-ceilinged warehouse loft. His menu spanned the Middle East, North Africa and entire the Mediterranean region, and quickly drew acclaim for his skill and the food’s “sheer, unadulterated deliciousness,” according to the Star Tribune’s restaurant critic. It also made Wadi, who grew up in a Palestinian home in Kuwait, one of the most influential chefs in the Twin Cities.
A decade later, with a food truck and brick-and-mortar restaurant (World Street Kitchen) and an ice cream shop (Milkjam Creamery), the brothers decided not to renew Saffron’s lease.
“We closed it at a time that it was making money and was successful, like, exactly the opposite of why people close down restaurants,” Wadi said. “We closed that restaurant just because of the circumstances, because we couldn’t see ourselves in that particular location for 10 more years.”

Since it closed, Saffron has remained on a shortlist of restaurants that still trigger wistful memories of beloved dishes.
Wadi said he can’t wait to bring some of those “fan favorites” back, while also creating new ones. He’s still scouting locations, and can’t say for sure whether the idea will come to fruition in 2024 or beyond. But he’s ready.