

Jay’s Bistro is a locally-owned, legacy restaurant located in Old Town, Fort Collins, Colorado. Originating nearly 40 years ago, Jay’s is a staple of the classic yet contemporary dining scene in Colorado, offering fresh, expertly-prepared dishes, served for lunch and dinner. Jay’s offers private meeting spaces (2), catering, fine dining, a full bar with top shelf liquors, wines, and locally brewed beers in addition to imports, in a warm, inviting setting. Live jazz music is featured in the bar area on Fridays and Saturdays, showcasing several musicians from the Northern Colorado area. Jay’s is an everyday and special occasion destination of Fort Collins now owned by its executive chef and former manager.
Swanky, special-occasion American eatery filled with art, serving up seasonal fare & live jazz.
Menu Photos
Related Web Results
Fort Collins restaurant Jay’s Bistro to close after more than 30 years
Jay’s Bistro | Fort Collins CO – Facebook
Jays Bistro (@jaysbistrofc) · Fort Collins, CO – Instagram
Reviews
They have a nice kid’s menu and brought the kid order out with the appetizer, always a good choice.
The calamari, lobster bisque, wagyu burger, and mussels were all delicious.
Service was wonderful and attentive.
Really liked the ambiance as well. Nice, mellow dinner night.
Starting with drinks – “Sea you later” sounded so promising. Gin, blueberry syrup, Lillet blanc, lemon juice, rhubarb bitters, prosecco. All I tasted was gin and prosecco. It was almost like they forgot half the ingredients. Standard $10 per drink, but I’d opt out next time.
Appetizer – we shared crab cakes. Sharing was a bad idea – there were two of them and they were minuscule. Not warm throughout, with a surprisingly bland bearnaise sauce, and with the cardinal mistake of including some shell pieces in them. Thankfully they came with a slice of lemon so we were able to get some acidity and flavor. So not worth the $20 asking price.
For main courses, we had the lamb chops and scallops. Scallops were nice, well seared, but the “risotto” was just some mushy reheated rice. Very far removed from a proper plate of risotto you’d expect at the price range.
Lamb chops with potatoes au gratin and sugar snap peas were fine, if completely generic and uninspired. The star of the night were the snap peas – surprisingly snappy and well done. Lamb was cooked properly, potatoes were fine too, but it did not taste like a $50 plate of food. Just… forgettable.
Also, it was so very loud in there. Noise level was on par with a sports bar. I’m not sure how or why – it’s a nice bistro with live jazz, but we could barely have a conversation across a two person table.
All in all, a very uninspired meal, especially considering the price. With tip, at $170 for two (one app, three drinks, two main courses), it is extremely overpriced for what you get. I keep comparing it to Chimney Park because of the similar price point when you opt for a la carte, but in reality, these two places are so far removed, they aren’t even on the same playing field. Heck, I’m not sure if they are playing the same sport.
2.5 stars from me, if Google allowed half stars.I’ve read the other amazing reviews and I am bummed we missed that experience. Maybe we went on an off-night.