Chef Eunji Lee Opens Lysée, a Pastry Gallery in Flatiron

“Do you like sweets?”

It feels like a trick question — it’s hard to imagine anyone answering “no” in the presence of pastry chef Eunji Lee. The chef is offering a tour of her ambitious solo pastry project Lysée, located in a bilevel space in New York’s Flatiron. The kitchen is calm and sweetly scented a few days before opening.

More from WWD

Lee was formerly the executive pastry chef at the two Michelin-starred restaurant Jungsik, where she worked for several years after a decade in France. She met her husband and fellow pastry chef Matthieu Lobry while working in the kitchen at Le Meurice; Lobry recently moved to New York to join Lee as a partner in Lysée. An affinity for Flatiron’s dining scene led her to want to establish her own roots in the neighborhood.

“When I go out, I come to this area to eat,” she says.

The project is backed by Hand Hospitality, which operates a constellation of Korean restaurants like Atomix and Jua nearby.

Lysée is a portmanteau of Lee’s name and the French word for museum. Lee imagined the project as a hallowed space for the art of pastry, a place where the concept of a bakery is elevated to that of a museum or gallery.

“Pastry is edible art to me, and that’s why I became a pastry chef; I love art,” says Lee. “Pastry looks beautiful, but you can also eat it.”

The space is situated so that the takeaway counter is upstairs, a reference to the experience of ascending the main staircase at an institution like the Metropolitan Museum of Art or MoMA.

“My concept was a museum or gallery. So when you go to the museum or gallery, you don’t mind going upstairs,” she says. “And at the end, you stop by a cafe or a souvenir shop. So that was the idea.”

Lysée reflects Lee’s Korean heritage, identity as a New Yorker, and French culinary training. Offerings include a signature cake with Korean toasted brown rice mousse, molded in Lysée’s emblem; a corn mousse cake; strawberry tart, and loafs like carrot cake topped with carrot and pecan chips and a yuzu cake. A shortbread cookie will rotate flavors monthly to reflect what produce is in season; the opening flavor is toasted buckwheat.

The design concept was Korean culture meets New York, blending traditional and modern elements. Customers are welcomed into the serene space by a walkway flanked by pebbles; the lower-level dining room, off to the right, is dedicated to table service, with a chef’s counter set up for future demonstrations and chef collaborations. Upstairs, the “dessert gallery” features pastries displayed along the walls and on a central thin table display. A counter offers takeaway and coffee service in collaboration with Coffee Project, as well as Lysée-bottled drinks like toasted brown rice infused milk, and herbed calamansi juice.

The space features two signature materials: Pocheon, white granite from Korea, and wooden pillars from old Korean houses. A large window upstairs overlooks the street; when the team stripped it to be painted, they discovered an old wooden frame, which matched the wooden beams throughout the space and spoke to the Korea-New York synergy. Downstairs, a traditional Korean greeting bell hangs in the window (Lee modified it to be silent).

“This is all me,” says Lee of crafting the space to reflect her personal story. “And I put all my energy and love in it.”

Lysée is open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Carrot cake - Credit: Courtesy
Carrot cake - Credit: Courtesy

Courtesy

More From the Eye:

North Fork Hotel The Shoals Roots Itself to the Waterfront

Aquazzura Celebrates Art of Hosting With Tableware Launch

Christopher Kane Has No Expectations When It Comes to Creating Art

Launch Gallery: Inside Flatiron Pastry Gallery Lysée

Best of WWD

Sign up for WWD's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.

Click here to read the full article.