Industry ink: Tattoos in Boulder kitchens

Boulder chefs and bartenders bare their souls through their tattoos

By Tyler Hickman - May 15, 2025
VazquezStove-scaled
Cafe Aion Executive Chef Austen Vazquez got his first tattoo when he was 15. Credit: Tyler Hickman

Tattoos are forever. Sometimes, a good meal can be, too. While it doesn’t leave a mark on our bodies, like six hours of a needle punching ink into the outermost layer of our skin, taking a bite of truly good food can change us.

It’s no wonder the people behind these transcendent experiences are often covered head to toe in body art. For some, each piece has profound origins: the death of a loved one, a battle with substance abuse. For others, they represent spontaneous self expression, or perhaps an act of rebellion. 

Many of the chefs, bartenders and restaurateurs behind Boulder’s evolving food scene have injected the stories — literally worn on their sleeves — into the food we eat. 

“Everybody in the kitchen, we feel like pirates, in a way,” Cafe Aion’s executive chef Austen Vasquez says. “Maybe not at the nice Michelin-starred restaurants. But down and dirty, in the middle of service, we’re all dying. But we’re going down with the ship together, and there’s just a certain sense of camaraderie.”

“I think as chefs, if we see another chef with tattoos, we’re like, ‘OK, this guy’s been through it.’”

Boulder Weekly boarded the ship to capture the ink, and the people, who are raising the mast of the Boulder food service industry.

Quotes have been edited for brevity and clarity.

Cafe Aion

Executive Chef Austen Vasquez

Executive Chef Austen Vasquez never went to culinary school, but grew up working in restaurants in Detroit. One of his early jobs was as a dishwasher for Niwot’s now-closed Colterra Food & Wine, where he quickly jumped to the line as a chef. Vazquez’s tattoos have many origins; experiencing loss, marking his journey in rehab, “prison ink” he got while he was incarcerated, even a tattoo of an ex-girlfriend (which he says he regrets.)

“I think it’s super subjective for everybody, but it does kind of tie us together in that we have all experienced something, and we expressed our past and our memories through our food.” 

“My whole goal with making food is to evoke emotion. Memory is the best compliment somebody can give me. ‘I used to have this at my grandma’s, and it reminds me of home.’ That to me is the best thing that can happen. My past makes me who I am. My tattoos are more a story, like documenting my life. And so is my food.”

After losing a father figure when he was 15, Vasquez got his first tattoo, a nine-hour session etching his life mantra spanning wrist to wrist across his back: “The Warrior meditates on death, so that when death and dark things transpire, he may be at a place of complete serenity in his heart.”

Chef Austen Vazquez browns butter for diners at Cafe Aion on Thursday, April 24.


Ginger Pig

An Alabama native, Bedsole’s first tattoo was a backpiece: the outline of Alabama with the date 4/27 inside, in memoriam of the 2011 super tornado outbreak that decimated his hometown.

Director of Operations Ward Bedsole

“I had a near-death experience about eight, nine years ago, and afterwards, I didn’t think I had very long to live. But I also had a severe insensitivity to pain, so I maxed out one of my credit cards getting as many tattoos as I could.”

“When people go to describe me, one of the first things they say is tattooed. And that’s kind of where that started. I was also neck deep in a really nerdy cocktail bar at the time. So everybody had a shit ton of tattoos. I always wanted to be heavily tattooed; I just needed a couple of nudges.”

Director of Operations Ward Bedsole is a self-proclaimed nerd; he has tattoos of the makeup of each chemical found in cannabis and a pineapple signifying the trade history of the fruit as a symbol of hospitality.

Boulder Executive Chef Andrew Edwards’ “Chefstronaut” on the inside of his leg. His first tattoo was a cooking formula on his forearm during culinary school. They weren’t allowed notes for exams, so he made a permanent cheat sheet for himself.

Natascha Hess, founder of Ginger Pig, doesn’t have many tattoos — but did ink the Michelin logo on her arm after her restaurant won Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition.


River and Woods

General Manager Maddie Curry

River and Woods’ menu changes with the season, and Curry is the mixologist behind the restaurant’s craft cocktail menu. She says it can sometimes take her three months of fixation on one drink before she gets it right.

“I grew up in a very Christian household, being from Georgia, so I kind of wanted to piss my parents off a little bit. But I just fell in love with it. It’s a little doodle on my body that’s a part of me, and it’s fun and makes me feel good.”

“[Bartending is] creative. It’s something that I just fell in love with. It’s like not paperwork at work, which is really nice. I get to use my creative side of my brain instead of my analytical one. I’m a big multitasker, I don’t like to be standing still. I love talking to people here, but I also love making drinks. And you’re on stage.” 

Maddie Curry, 25, started working at River and Woods as a host in 2020, and worked her way up to general manager of the farm-to-table staple on East Pearl. 

Curry’s first tattoo was a matching piece she got with her brother. She says her brother has a lot of tattoos, and is the main reason she got the itch herself.


Barchetta

Founder and Executive Chef Jesse Jensen

Jensen got his first tattoo, a mustache on the inside of his middle finger, right when he turned 18, and then couldn’t stop.

“I like getting tattoos when I travel. It’s cool to meet new artists and have a souvenir. I don’t have a ton of meaningful tattoos; I just have fun tattoos. I’ve got a lot of flash tattoos that are like small impulses.”

“I’ve always just had fun with food here. There’s all this rad stuff that’s associated with pizza. That’s kind of what drew me to pizza, I guess. I feel like I didn’t choose pizza, pizza chose me.” 

Longmont-born Jensen started his career at Little Caesars, and eventually found himself as the Chef de Cuisine at Boulder’s Pizzeria Locale (now Pizzeria Alberico) before opening Barchetta in 2021.

Jensen loves pizza so much, he put a slice on his arm.

Barchetta Sous Chef Lex Larson preps for the dessert of the month, lemon bars. She says doesn’t really like snakes, but was inspired to get her snake tattoo because they have to shed their own skin to survive.


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