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Buttercup restaurant
Buttercup restaurant




“We all love being part of this community that our parents started, hopefully continuing the tradition for the next generation of Bay Area families.”Ī version of this story first appeared in J., The Jewish News of Northern California. “There’s something both gratifying and exciting about working for yourself, for a business you own, that we just didn’t feel when working for other people,” Jonathan said. Ben, the middle sibling, is a board member of the California Restaurant Association and is interested in the intersection between business and politics. “We saw how much heart and soul our parents invested into the restaurant, and felt from a young age really proud that it was part of our family legacy,” said Jonathan Shahvar, the eldest of the three, who manages one of the Oakland locations and also works on marketing and partnerships. David’s title is still president, though in recent years he has been stepping back.

buttercup restaurant

In fact, all three Shahvar children work for the family business, even though the parents tried to steer them in different directions. Daughter Jessica attended culinary school so she could help her mother with recipe testing. Throughout the years, Shahvar has come up with all of the recipes and trained the chefs to make sure the dishes are up to her high standards. There are a few Jewish touches on the menu, like New York pastrami on rye with a dill pickle and, at the Walnut Creek location, matzah ball soup on Fridays. While in the diner world, many rely on pre-made items, like frozen mozzarella sticks, at Buttercup they make their own batter for frying and serve them with house-made marinara sauce. Photo: Buttercup DinerĪsked for some customer favorites, she singles out the buttermilk biscuits and a product of her own creation called the “Cinnascuit,” a biscuit dipped in cinnamon sugar and topped with cream cheese frosting. Debbie Shahvar in the Buttercup Diner kitchen in Walnut Creek. It’s a concept they’ve stuck to, though “we’re constantly updating it, keeping it relevant,” said Shahvar. They had already started their family at the time and wanted to create their own version of a family-style restaurant - a place where most everything would be made in-house and “where families could come, where parents could have fresh fish, steaks or prime rib, but kids would feel comfortable, too.” The couple bought an existing place in Walnut Creek called Buttercup Pantry, changed the name to Buttercup Diner and opened in 1988. When they moved to the Bay Area, they thought “rather than work really hard for someone else, we figured we’d work hard for ourselves,” she said. “He was Israeli, he knew I was Jewish, and the rest is history,” she said. She waited tables at a restaurant called Smuggler’s Inn to put herself through school, and there she met David Shahvar, a regional manager of the restaurant group. Originally from Virginia, Shahvar came to California to attend college at Cal Poly Pomona. I’d be disappointed and would try to make them work for me.” I was always curious about recipes, but the reason I started developing my own was because a lot of them didn’t work very well. “I’d make it over and over again until I got the perfect one. “I was searching for the perfect chocolate chip cookie,” she said. Shahvar wanted to be a journalist cooking was something she enjoyed as a hobby. My mom worked, but she always made homemade chicken soup, for example.”

buttercup restaurant

“Unfortunately, I didn’t know her, but of course all of our holidays were defined by food. “My grandmother was supposedly a legendary cook,” she said.

buttercup restaurant

Breakfast offerings at Buttercup Diner in Walnut Creek.

buttercup restaurant

Especially taking into account that Shahvar became an executive chef without culinary training. In a challenging climate for restaurants - largely due to the Bay Area’s cost of living and the lack of affordable places for workers to live - the fact that the family has hit the 30-year mark is noteworthy. “On Sundays, we get a lot of people who come from church,” said Shahvar. “Debbie is a wonderful executive chef and is a particularly good baker,” Levine said.īut it’s not only Jews who congregate there. Bob Levine, a synagogue lay leader, calls the diner “an integral part of our community.” The shul hosts its monthly “lunch ’n’ learn” in a private room at Buttercup, where a dairy lunch is followed by baked goods for dessert.






Buttercup restaurant