April 8, 1948 – May 20, 2024
Dallas restaurateur Jim Baron, co-founder of Blue Mesa Grill, dies at 76
Longtime Dallas restaurateur Jim Baron, who founded acclaimed concepts such as the Blue Mesa Grill chain with his wife Liz Baron, passed away on May 20, after a long fight with cancer; he was 76.
The couple, who helped usher in a unique and fresh Southwestern-style variant on Mexican food in Dallas, were a major force in the restaurant scene since starting their company 36 years ago, founding other ground-breaking concepts such as TNT/Tacos and Tequila, Caliente, and Zuma. Baron was born in Brooklyn and earned a PhD in psychology from NYU. He started his career as a therapist but was drawn to starting a business where he felt he could improve lives in a real way.
Before opening Blue Mesa in 1988, he spent eight years as an executive with Taco Bell and El Torito Restaurants, Inc. When El Torito founder Larry Cano allowed Jim to turn around El Torito’s failing Texas restaurants, Jim presented Cano with a proposal to change all the El Torito’s in Texas to different concepts.
Jim and Liz wanted to develop a concept that was affordable but had better food, atmosphere, and service than a typical chain restaurant – an important part of the business model for the Blue Mesa concept.
He wrote the restaurant manager training program for the Texas Restaurant Association and was a recipient of the TRA’s Restaurateur of the Year award. He was also involved in immigration issues and worked for years with the Texas Business Immigration Coalition to try to improve the status and opportunities for immigrants.
In addition to being an amazing family man and restaurateur, he was a humanitarian, artist, and athlete. He was an avid surfer his entire life and won third place at the Veterans International Wrestling Championship in the Czech Republic while in his 50s.
He’s survived by children Kate (Ian) Stewart and Zak Baron, grandchild Izzy Stewart, and his brother Daniel (Gwyneth) Baron. His memorial will be held on May 24 at 1:30 pm at Temple Emanu-El in the Stern Chapel, 8500 Hillcrest Rd. in Dallas.
Instead of flowers, please donate to The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society lls.org or the Texas Business Immigration Coalition texasrita.org.
For questions regarding this document, contact Liz Baron at lbaron@bluemesagrill.com or 214-934-8328
Jim Baron, CEO, Blue Mesa Grill, Texas
Mango Habanero SaucePeach Blueberry Margarita

When he’s not surfing the turquoise break of a wave off the coast of some exotic locale or honing his championship wrestling style, Jim Baron is at the helm of the Blue Mesa Grill with his wife, Liz Baron.
Baron, a 25-year veteran of the restaurant industry, is CEO of the highly acclaimed Blue Mesa Grill, a collection of five contemporary southwest restaurants in the Dallas area. He’s also president of Mesa SW Restaurants Inc., which includes TNT/Tacos and Tequila, a younger, more elemental concept encompassing a grill and tequila bar. Located in Austin, TNT/Tacos and Tequila is expanding into San Antonio and Dallas and was recently rated by Zagat as one of top 10 places in the U.S. to sip tequila.
The Zagat Survey of Texas Restaurants handed Blue Mesa its “Exceptional Sunday Brunch” award. The same outstanding menu won Blue Mesa third place for Best Brunch in the World from the International Restaurant & Hotel Awards. “We’ve gotten pretty stellar awards for both concepts,” Baron says.
At the heart of both concepts is a very robust and vertically integrated tequila program that focuses on a different distiller each month. The Perfect Purée is ideal for creating the fresh taste that’s the essence of the margaritas and tequilas cocktails at Blue Mesa and TNT, Baron says.
“There are certain flavors where fresh fruit is good but a lot of times fresh does not give us enough power and The Perfect Purée provides more intensity,” he says.
The Perfect Purée Red Raspberry Puree, for example, complements fresh-squeezed lemon and lime juice, fresh mint, and agave nectar in Blue Mesa’s Raspberry Limonada, which features Olmeca Altos hand-crafted tequila.
In his opinion, Baron says the bartender has become the next great chef and The Perfect Purée is an important part of the “mise en place” of great mixology.
“That’s the cutting edge of things, playing with different flavors — sweet and savory, sweet and smoky, sweet and spicy. The Perfect Purée is, at a high level, part of that mixology because they’ve got very esoteric and very high-quality consistent flavors,” Baron says.
The Perfect Purée plays a role in Blue Mesa’s kitchens as well, appearing in marinades and glazes.
“We have a ginger chipotle glaze with the Perfect Purée Ginger Puree, as well as a mango and lime glaze,” Barons says.
Prior to opening Blue Mesa with Liz in 1988, Jim spent eight years as an executive with Taco Bell and El Torito Restaurants, Inc. When El Torito’s founder, Larry Cano, gave Jim the opportunity to turn around El Torito’s failing Texas restaurants, Jim presented Cano with a proposal to change all of the El Torito’s in Texas to different concepts.
Cano was so impressed that he sold the properties to Jim and Blue Mesa Grill took off. From the start, Jim and Liz were adamant about developing a concept that was affordable, but had better food, atmosphere and service than a typical casual theme chain restaurant.
“We believe our customers want authenticity and flavor in their food, so our food has the ‘bold and colorful tastes of the Southwest’ based on it being made from scratch each day from fresh ingredients,” Jim says.
Besides trusting his team of bartenders to keep the bar menu current and seasonal with locally-sourced ingredients, Baron says he finds inspiration when he’s far away from work.
“I was surfing in Santa Cruz and after a session went up to the pier and a guy was making this chicken with this incredible set of spices and dirty margaritas with caramelized simple syrup and tamarind,” he recalled.
Baron went home and adapted that smokey caramelized base for his version. “We won awards with that dirty margarita,” he says. “A lot of ideas don’t come from forcing it but from natural exposure, getting away from the business and just exploring.”
Jim was the director of Link Counseling Center in Lynbrook, NY when I was a teenager. I am now 69 years old. Jimmy was always such a heart centered, emotionally safe and lovingly funny man in our lives. By our, I mean the younger people who attended Link. Link was a very progressive counseling and activities agency. I always looked up to Jimmy. He was an example of the kind of man I wanted to grow up to be. In many ways, I consider myself as having fulfilled that wish. I became a school social work counselor, working with children and families and I also became an addictions/family addictions counselor. I invested myself in my own therapy and in my recovery from the family disease of addiction. Jimmy’s spirit was an important emotional and spiritual infusion in my life. I will always remember him with love and gratitude. Thank you Jimmy for your great heart and for sharing yourself with us. Love, Steve
PS It is April 25th 2026 today. I only found out about Jimmy’s death today. My condolences go out to his family and his family of choice.