First Look: The Alden in Chamblee marks return of Atlanta native chef Jared Hucks

The Alden Pan Asian Egg with a soft coddled farm egg, bok choy, ginger, and rice cracker. Photo credit- Mia Yakel.

Credit: Bob Townsend

Credit: Bob Townsend

The Alden Pan Asian Egg with a soft coddled farm egg, bok choy, ginger, and rice cracker. Photo credit- Mia Yakel.

Chef Jared Alden Hucks opened the Alden in early April in the Parkview on Peachtree mixed-use development in Chamblee.

An Atlanta native, Hucks grew up in nearby Brookhaven. After working in restaurants to pay for college, he fell in love with cooking, and graduated from the French Culinary Institute in New York City. Later, he traveled the world, working for renowned chefs in Australia, Thailand, Italy, Spain and Denmark.

His return to Atlanta a few years ago reconnected him with family and old friends, and Hucks partnered with Adam Fox of Domaine Select Wine and Spirits to operate a local supper club, Dogwood Table.

That opportunity provided the research and development that led to the Alden, where Hucks is creating an intimate dining experience in a bright space with lofty ceilings and contemporary design elements.

The open, exhibition-style kitchen is the focal point, allowing guests to interact with Hucks and his team, and opt for a tasting menu with beverage pairings.

The weekly dinner and brunch menus showcase seasonal ingredients in dishes that blend Hucks’ international culinary explorations with Southern influences.

North African harissa and chermoula spice up his shrimp and grits with greens. A “Pan Asian” soft coddled farm egg is served with bok choy, ginger, and rice crackers. Local spring lettuces with cucumber dressing are plated with a melange of carrot, beet root, radish, hemp hearts, and Capra Gia chevre.

 Chef Jared Hucks. Photo credit- Mia Yakel.

Credit: Bob Townsend

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Credit: Bob Townsend

Last week before service at the Alden, Hucks sat down to talk about the long journey to opening his first restaurant, and how his life has changed since coming back to Atlanta.

“In 2006, I left the country on a backpacking tour that was going to last 18 months, and I stayed gone for seven years. That became a big part of my career,” Hucks said. “I soon realized that if I wanted to keep traveling, I was going to need to start working, too.”

By 2010, Hucks wound up in San Sebastian, where he went to work for legendary Spanish chef Juan Mari Arzak. And with that on his resume, he moved on to Denmark and found a place in the kitchen at Noma, with René Redzepi, the chef who invented New Nordic cuisine.

“After I spent two months at Noma, I finally realized that there was a whole new generation of chefs behind me, and I was getting older, and it was time for me to come back to the States and do something of my own,” Hucks said. “I hadn’t seen my mom and dad much over the years. And I had reconnected with my high school sweetheart while I was in Spain.

“Now we’re engaged and we live in my childhood home. I never thought I would wind up back in Brookhaven in that house with my high school sweetheart. It’s been pretty surreal. It’s a full circle sort of story. Here I am right back in my old neighborhood, cooking at my restaurant, 3 miles from the house I grew up in.”

Originally, Hucks wanted to open a restaurant in Brookhaven, but he could never find the right spot. With its rapid growth, Chamblee suddenly became a viable option, and in 2016, he began the process of opening the Alden.

“The timing worked out perfectly,” Hucks said. “And it goes without saying that there’s more than enough traffic and people around here. It’s a great area with plenty of commerce. We started from dirt building the restaurant. The whole focal point was the kitchen, and the convivial feeling of being among old friends and familiar faces, and really just breaking down the barriers between the diners and the chefs.

“And it was important that I had a small space so that we could manage the concept and the quality of what we were trying to do. I did a lot of research on the design of the open kitchen. I was really inspired by a couple of places that David Chang had done, and so it’s a similar design to KO in New York.”

After six weeks of business, Hucks said he’s getting a pretty good feeling for what guests think of his food and his restaurant.

“When it’s a open kitchen, and you make that connection with people, you have a great idea what people think,” he said. “I get right in their faces and I read their reactions and I know that we’re making people happy. But it’s a work in progress. And each day we try to do it better.”

5070 Peachtree Blvd., Chamblee. 678-395-6982, thealdenrestaurant.com.

More images from a First Look at the Alden in Chamblee

 Spring Lettuces with Cucumber Dressing and carrot, beet root, radish, hemp hearts, and Capra Gia chevre. Photo credit- Mia Yakel.

Credit: Bob Townsend

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Credit: Bob Townsend

 Harissa Shrimp and Grits with chermoula, aged cheddar, and kale. Photo credit- Mia Yakel.

Credit: Bob Townsend

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Credit: Bob Townsend

 Maine Sea Scallops with sunchoke, kale, and blood orange. Photo credit- Mia Yakel.

Credit: Bob Townsend

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Credit: Bob Townsend

 Florida Grouper with peperoni arrosto, black olive oil, pine nuts, caper, and broccoli. Photo credit- Mia Yakel.

Credit: Bob Townsend

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Credit: Bob Townsend

 Flourless Chocolate Cake with strawberry gelato and creme anglaise.

Credit: Bob Townsend

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Credit: Bob Townsend

 Red Rum Cocktail with rye whisky, dark rum, Grand Marnier, and bitters. Photo credit- Mia Yakel

Credit: Bob Townsend

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Credit: Bob Townsend

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